OpenGL is an immediate mode graphics programming API originally developed by SGI based on their previous proprietary Iris GL, and became in industry standard several years ago. It is defined and maintained by the Architectural Revision Board (ARB), an organization that includes members as SGI, IBM, and DEC, and Microsoft.
OpenGL provides a complete feature set for 2D and 3D graphics operations in a pipelined hardware accelerated architecture for triangle and polygon rendering. In a broader sense, OpenGL is a powerful and generic toolset for hardware assisted computer graphics.
The official site for OpenGL maintained by the members of the ARB, is www.opengl.org,
A most recommended site is Mark Kilgard's Gateway to OpenGL Info at reality.sgi.com/mjk_asd/opengl-links.html: it provides pointers to book, online manual pages, GLUT, GLE, Mesa, ports to several OS, tons of demos and tools.
If you are interested in game programming using OpenGL,
there is the OpenGL-GameDev-L@fatcity.com
at
Listserv@fatcity.com
. Be warned, this is
a high traffic list with very technical content, and
you will probably prefer to use procmail
to
handle the 100 messages per day coming in. You cut
down bandwidth using the
SET OpenGL-GameDev-L DIGEST
command. It is also
not appropriate if you are looking for introductions.
The archive is handled by the ListServ software, use
the
INDEX OpenGL-GameDev-L
and
GET OpenGL-GameDev-L "filename"
commands to get a preview before subscribing.
No, Glide is a proprietary 3Dfx API which several features specific to the Voodoo Graphics (tm) and Voodoo Rush (tm). A 3Dfx OpenGL is in preparation (see below). Several Glide features would require EXTensions to OpenGL, some of which already found in other implementations (e.g. paletted textures).
The closest thing to a hardware accelerated Linux OpenGL you could currently get is Brian Paul's Mesa along with David Bucciarelli's Mesa Voodoo driver (see below).
Both the 3Dfx website and the Quantum3D website announced OpenGL for Voodoo Graphics (tm) to be available 4Q97. The driver is currently in Beta, and accessible only to registered deverloper's under written Beta test agreement.
A linux port has not been announced yet.
I am not aware of any third party commercial OpenGL that supports the Voodoo Graphics (tm). Last time I paid attention, neither MetroX nor XInside OpenGL did.
Mesa is a free implementation of the OpenGL API, designed and written by Brian Paul, with contributions from many others. Its performance is competitive, and while it is not officially certified, it is an almost fully compliant OpenGL implementation conforming to the ARB specifications - more complete than some commercial products out, actually.
The latest Mesa MesaVer; release works with Linux Glide 2.4. In fact, support was included in earlier versions, however, this driver is still under development, so be prepared for bugs and less than optimal performance. It is steadily improving, though, and bugs are usually fixed very fast.
You will need to get the Mesa library archive from the iris.ssec.wisc.edu FTP site. It is recommended to subscribe to the mailing list as well, especially when trying to track down bugs, hardware, or driver limitations. Make sure to get the most recent distribution. A Mesa-3.0 is in preparation.
It is available for Linux and Win32, and any application based on Mesa will only have the usual system specific code, which should usually mean XWindows vs. Windows, or GLX vs. WGL. If you use e.g. GLUT or Qt, you should get away with any system specifics at all for virtually most applications. There are only a few issues (like sampling relative mouse movement) that are not adressed by the available portable GUI toolkits.
Mesa/Glide is also available for DOS. The port which is 32bit DOS is maintained by Charlie Wallace and kept up to date with the main Mesa base. See www.geocities.com/~charlie_x/.for the most current releases.
The Mesa home page is at www.ssec.wisc.edu/~brianp/Mesa.html. There is an archive of the Mesa mailing list. at www.iqm.unicamp.br/mesa/. This list is not specific to 3Dfx and Glide, but if you are interested in using 3Dfx hardware to accelerate Mesa, it is a good place to start.
For latest information on the Mesa Voodoo driver maintained by David Bucciarelli tech.hmw@plus.it see the home page at www-hmw.caribel.pisa.it/fxmesa/.
Not yet (as of Mesa 2.6), but it is on the list.
In Mesa you will probably have to use the OpenGL
EXT_multitexture
extension once it is
available. There is no final specification for
multitextures in OpenGL, which is supposed to be
part of the upcoming OpenGL 1.2 revision. There might
be a Glide driver specific implementation of
the extension in upcoming Mesa releases, but as
long as only certain Quantum3D Obsidian boards come
with multiple TMU's, it is not a top priority. This
will surely change once Voodoo 2 (tm) based boards are in
widespread use.
Multiple TMU's should be used for single pass trilinear mipmapping for improvement image quality without performance penalty in current Linux Glide already. Mesa support is not yet done (as of Mesa 2.6), but is in preparation.
The most recent revisions of Mesa contain an experimental
feature for Linux XFree86. Basically, the GLX emulation
used by Mesa copies the contents of the Voodoo Graphics (tm) board's
most recently finished framebuffer content into video
memory on each glXSwapBuffers
call. This feature
is also available with Mesa for Windows.
This obviously puts some drain on the PCI, doubled by the fact that this uses X11 MIT SHM, not XFree86 DGA to access the video memory. The same approach could theoretically be used with e.g. SVGA. The major benefit is that you could use a Voodoo Graphics (tm) board for accelerated rendering into a window, and that you don't have to use the VGA passthrough mode (video output of the VGA board deteoriates in passing through, which is very visible with high end monitors like e.g. EIZO F784-T).
Note that this experimental feature is NOT Voodoo Rush (tm) support by any means. It applies only to the Voodoo Graphics (tm) based boards. Moreover, you need to use a modified GLUT, as interfacing the window management system and handling the events appropriately has to be done by the application, it is not handled in the driver.
Make really sure that you have enabled the following environment variables:
export SST_VGA_PASS=1 # to stop video signal switching export SST_NOSHUTDOWN=1 # to stop video signal switching export MESA_GLX_FX="window" # to initiate Mesa window mode
Finally, note that the libMesaGL.a (or .so) library can contain multiple client interfaces. I.e. the GLX, OSMesa, and fxMesa (and even SVGAMesa) interfaces call all be compiled into the same libMesaGL.a. The client program can use any of them freely, even simultaneously if it's careful.
Mark Kilgard's GLUT distribution is a very good place to get sample applications plus a lot of useful utilities. You will find it at reality.sgi.com/mjk_asd/glut3/, and you should get it anyway. The current release is GLUT 3.6, and discussion on a GLUT 3.7 (aka GameGLUT) has begun. Note that Mark Kilgard has left SGI recently, so the archive might move some time this year - for the time being it will be kept at SGI.
There is also a GLUT mailing list,
glut@perp.com
. Send mail to
majordomo@perp.com,
with the (on of the) following
in the body of your email message:
help info glut subscribe glut end
As GLUT handles double buffers, windows, events, and other operations closely tied to hardware and operating system, using GLUT with Voodoo Graphics (tm) requires support, which is currently in development within GLX for Mesa. It already works for most cases.
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