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OpenXR-Hpp project

This repository contains build scripts and test files for the openxr*.hpp headers, providing a C++-friendly projection of the OpenXR API.

The authoritative public repository is located at https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenXR-HPP/. It hosts the public Issue tracker, and accepts patches (Pull Requests) from the general public.

If you want to simply write an application using OpenXR (the headers and loader), with minimum dependencies, see https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenXR-SDK/. That project will likely contain the openxr*.hpp artifact when it is ready for widespread production usage.

To build this project, you must have OpenXR-SDK-Source cloned in a peer directory of this one.

Directory Structure

  • README.md - This file
  • COPYING.md - Copyright and licensing information
  • CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md - Code of Conduct
  • OPENXR-HPP.md - Some basic introductory documentation
  • include/ - Build system to generate the openxr*.hpp files
  • scripts/ - Python source code and Jinja2 templates for generating the headers.
  • tests/ - some simple files that ensures the header is always compilable.

Building

Install clang-format

Requires clang-format, preferably 6.0.

Download OpenXR-Hpp

git clone https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenXR-Hpp.git

Download OpenXR-SDK-Source

git clone https://github.com/KhronosGroup/OpenXR-SDK-Source.git

We need to place the OpenXR-SDK-Source in the same directory of OpenXR-Hpp as it uses Python script of OpenXR-SDK-Source.

If your OpenXR-SDK-Source (or internal gitlab) repo isn't in a directory named that parallel to OpenXR-Hpp, you can set OPENXR_REPO environment variable before running.

Run script to generate hpp files

Run un ./generate-openxr-hpp.sh or ./generate-openxr-hpp.ps1.

Run tests

If you'd like to build the tests (making sure the headers can compile), use CMake to generate a build system, like:

mkdir build
cd build
cmake ..
make

Development

To improve/maintain consistent code style and code quality, we strongly recommend setting up the pre-commit hooks, which check/correct:

  • large file additions
  • byte-order marker
  • case conflicts
  • unresolved merge conflicts
  • broken symlinks
  • file endings
  • line endings
  • trailing whitespace
  • autopep8
  • cmake-format

Using these hooks involves the following steps:

Install pre-commit - available thru pip or your preferred package manager.

python3 -m pip install --user pre-commit

Setup the git hook scripts by running this script. This will configure the current git repo working directory to run the hooks, as well as cloning and building (if required) the various tools used by the hooks.

pre-commit install

Optionally, you can run the hooks over all files manually, before a commit:

pre-commit run --all-files