12 KiB
Contribution Guide
Contents
- Asking a question
- Reporting a bug
- Requesting a feature
- Contributing a bug fix
- Contributing a feature
Asking a question
Questions about how to use GLFW should be asked in the support
section of the forum or in the IRC channel
#glfw
on Freenode.
Questions about the design or implementation of GLFW or about future plans
should be asked in the dev section of the
forum or in the IRC channel #glfw
on Freenode.
Reporting a bug
If GLFW is behaving unexpectedly at run-time, start by setting an error callback. GLFW will often tell you the cause of an error via this callback. If it doesn't, that might be a separate bug.
If GLFW is crashing or triggering asserts, make sure that all your object handles and other pointers are valid.
There are issue labels for both platforms and GPU manufacturers, so there is no need to mention these in the subject line. If you do, it will be removed when the issue is labeled.
If your bug is already reported, please add any new information you have, or if it already has everything, give it a 👍.
Reporting a compile or link bug
Note: GLFW needs many system APIs to do its job, which on some platforms means linking to many system libraries. If you are using GLFW as a static library, that means your application needs to link to these in addition to GLFW.
Note: Check the Compiling GLFW guide and or Building applications guide for before opening an issue of this kind. Most issues are caused by a missing package or linker flag.
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
) and the compiler name and version (i.e. Visual C++ 2015 Update 2
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include the complete build log from your compiler and linker, even if it's long. It can always be shortened later, if necessary.
Quick template
OS and version:
Compiler version:
Release or commit:
Build log:
Reporting a segfault or other crash bug
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include any error messages provided to your application via the error callback and the full call stack of the crash, or if the crash does not occur in debug mode, mention that instead.
Quick template
OS and version:
Release or commit:
Error messages:
Call stack:
Reporting a context creation bug
Note: Windows ships with graphics drivers that do not support OpenGL. If GLFW says that your machine lacks support for OpenGL, it very likely does. Install drivers from the computer manufacturer or graphics card manufacturer (Nvidia, AMD, Intel) to fix this.
Note: AMD only supports OpenGL ES on Windows via EGL. See the GLFW_CONTEXT_CREATION_API hint for how to select EGL.
Please verify that context creation also fails with the glfwinfo
tool before
reporting it as a bug. This tool is included in the GLFW source tree as
tests/glfwinfo.c
and is built along with the library. It has switches for all
GLFW context and framebuffer hints. Run glfwinfo -h
for a complete list.
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include the GLFW version string (3.2.0 X11 EGL clock_gettime /dev/js XI Xf86vm
), as described
here, the
GPU model and driver version (i.e. GeForce GTX660 with 352.79
), and the
output of glfwinfo
(with switches matching any hints you set in your
code) when reporting this kind of bug. If this tool doesn't run on the machine,
mention that instead.
Quick template
OS and version:
GPU and driver:
Release or commit:
Version string:
glfwinfo output:
Reporting a monitor or video mode bug
Note: On headless systems on some platforms, no monitors are reported. This
causes glfwGetPrimaryMonitor to return NULL
, which not all applications are
prepared for.
Note: Some third-party tools report more video modes than are approved of by the OS. For safety and compatibility, GLFW only reports video modes the OS wants programs to use. This is not a bug.
The monitors
tool is included in the GLFW source tree as tests/monitors.c
and is built along with the library. It lists all information GLFW provides
about monitors it detects.
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include any error messages provided to your application via the
error
callback and
the output of monitors
when reporting this kind of bug. If this tool
doesn't run on the machine, mention this instead.
Quick template
OS and version:
Release or commit:
Error messages:
monitors output:
Reporting an input or event bug
Note: The exact ordering of related window events will sometimes differ.
Note: Window moving and resizing (by the user) will block the main thread on some platforms. This is not a bug. Set a refresh callback if you want to keep the window contents updated during a move or size operation.
The events
tool is included in the GLFW source tree as tests/events.c
and is
built along with the library. It prints all information provided to every
callback supported by GLFW as events occur. Each event is listed with the time
and a unique number to make discussions about event logs easier. The tool has
command-line options for creating multiple windows and full screen windows.
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include any error messages provided to your application via the
error
callback and
if relevant, the output of events
when reporting this kind of bug. If
this tool doesn't run on the machine, mention this instead.
Quick template
OS and version:
Release or commit:
Error messages:
events output:
Reporting some other library bug
Always include the operating system name and version (i.e. Windows 7 64-bit
or Ubuntu 15.10
). If you are using an official release of GLFW,
include the GLFW release version (i.e. 3.1.2
), otherwise include the
GLFW commit ID (i.e. 3795d78b14ef06008889cc422a1fb8d642597751
) from Git.
Please also include any error messages provided to your application via the error callback, if relevant.
Quick template
OS and version:
Release or commit:
Error messages:
Reporting a documentation bug
If you found a bug in the documentation, including this file, then it's fine to just link to that web page or mention that source file. You don't need to match the source to the output or vice versa.
Reporting a website bug
If the bug is in the documentation (anything under /docs/
) then please see the
section above. Bugs in the rest of the site are reported to to the website
source repository.
Requesting a feature
Please explain why you need the feature and how you intend to use it. If you have a specific API design in mind, please add that as well. If you have or are planning to write code for the feature, see the section below.
Contributing a bug fix
Note: You must have all necessary rights to any code you contribute. If you did not write the code yourself, you must explain where it came from and under what license. Even code using the same license as GLFW may not be copied without attribution.
There is no preferred patch size. A one character fix is just as welcome as a thousand line one, if that is the appropriate size for the fix.
In addition to the code, a complete bug fix includes:
- Change log entry in
README.md
, describing the incorrect behavior - Credits entries for all authors of the bug fix
Bug fixes will not be rejected because they don't include all the above parts, but please keep in mind that maintainer time is finite and that there are many other bugs and features to work on.
If the patch fixes a bug introduced after the last release, it should not get a change log entry.
Contributing a feature
Note: You must have all necessary rights to any code you contribute. If you did not write the code yourself, you must explain where it came from and under what license. Even code using the same license as GLFW may not be copied without attribution.
There is no preferred patch size. A one character change is just as welcome as one adding a thousand line one, if that is the appropriate size for the feature.
In addition to the code, a complete feature includes:
- Change log entry in
README.md
, listing all new symbols - News page entry, briefly describing the feature
- Guide documentation, with minimal examples, in the relevant guide
- Reference documentation, with all applicable tags
- Cross-references and mentions in appropriate places
- Credits entries for all authors of the feature
If the feature requires platform-specific code, at minimum stubs must be added for the new platform function to all supported and experimental platforms.
If it adds a new callback, support for it must be added to tests/event.c
.
If it adds a new monitor property, support for it must be added to
tests/monitor.c
.
If it adds a new OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan option or extension, support
for it must be added to tests/glfwinfo.c
and the behavior of the library when
the extension is missing documented in docs/compat.dox
.
Features will not be rejected because they don't include all the above parts, but please keep in mind that maintainer time is finite and that there are many other features and bugs to work on.
Please also keep in mind that any part of the public API that has been included in a release cannot be changed until the next major version. Features can be added and existing parts can sometimes be overloaded (in the general sense of doing more things, not in the C++ sense), but code written to the API of one minor release should both compile and run on subsequent minor releases.