Valve have been extremely busy, and we are already seeing some fruits of their work. They have written a Vulkan driver for an Intel GPU, showed Source 2 with Dota 2 on it, and they will open source the driver.
It’s fantastic that Source 2 is getting in on the action so early! They even have a video of it running:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Hth4u65zfc
Thanks to PC Perspective for the video
You can see a slide below outlining a few interesting points:
Major thanks to SteamDB for being there and for their live blogging.
I really, badly, hope that Nvidia, AMD and Intel buckle down and get on it. It isn’t just Steam Machines and SteamOS that will push us to succeed, as we need this Vulkan API to bring the performance we have been lacking often.
There is also this video of a debugger called GLAVE developed by Valve and LunarG:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miZmas6sGqM
It’s worth noting that the Vulkan API has not yet been finalised, and we imagine we will hear more and more about it as the year goes on.
Vulkan here we come!
It’s fantastic that Source 2 is getting in on the action so early! They even have a video of it running:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Hth4u65zfc
Thanks to PC Perspective for the video
You can see a slide below outlining a few interesting points:
Major thanks to SteamDB for being there and for their live blogging.
I really, badly, hope that Nvidia, AMD and Intel buckle down and get on it. It isn’t just Steam Machines and SteamOS that will push us to succeed, as we need this Vulkan API to bring the performance we have been lacking often.
There is also this video of a debugger called GLAVE developed by Valve and LunarG:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=miZmas6sGqM
It’s worth noting that the Vulkan API has not yet been finalised, and we imagine we will hear more and more about it as the year goes on.
Vulkan here we come!
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Quoting: sarmadThe slide says "Vulcan supported ACROSS THE BOARD on Steam Machines". I assume this means both AMD and nVidia have Vulcan drivers for Linux in development.
They demoed NVIDIA drivers during the talk and the later Vulkan sessions on Windows. Since the only thing different between NVIDIA drivers across platforms is a small shim to abstract the OS it would probably work in a few weeks. The Imagination Technology guys (two of them) wrote their Vulkan driver for PowerVR in just two months.
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Quoting: blackout24Quoting: sarmadThe slide says "Vulcan supported ACROSS THE BOARD on Steam Machines". I assume this means both AMD and nVidia have Vulcan drivers for Linux in development.
They demoed NVIDIA drivers during the talk and the later Vulkan sessions on Windows. Since the only thing different between NVIDIA drivers across platforms is a small shim to abstract the OS it would probably work in a few weeks. The Imagination Technology guys (two of them) wrote their Vulkan driver for PowerVR in just two months.
Awesome news. Yeah, I expect Vulcan to be much easier to implement than OpenGL since it's a simplified API.
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Quoting: r2rXYou're just about right. Both the PS3 and PS4 are based of modified versions of FreeBSD.As PS4 not yet hacked I have no idea about it, but PS3 have far more things from NetBSD rather than FreeBSD. Though it's not like real OS as there is very few libraries available and it's not use things like X server, audio servers, etc.
Quoting: r2rXThe PS4 features two graphics APIs; a low-level API called GNM and a high level API called GNMX. (Sony also uses their own PlayStation Shader Language (PSSL), specifically introduced with the PS4).It's also have OpenGL ES 2 support: https://www.khronos.org/conformance/adopters/conformant-products#opengles
Though very likely that it's implemented on top of other API.
Quoting: r2rXThe PS3 uses PSGL (which is a mix of OpenGL ES and NVIDIA's CG).Nope. Just like PS4 it's mainly used is proprietary api called GCM and PSGL is implemented on top of it. Of course PSGL is extremely crippled (OpenGL ES 1.0) and was never used for anything except few casual games.
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Quoting: blackout24Quoting: sarmadThe slide says "Vulcan supported ACROSS THE BOARD on Steam Machines". I assume this means both AMD and nVidia have Vulcan drivers for Linux in development.
They demoed NVIDIA drivers during the talk and the later Vulkan sessions on Windows. Since the only thing different between NVIDIA drivers across platforms is a small shim to abstract the OS it would probably work in a few weeks. The Imagination Technology guys (two of them) wrote their Vulkan driver for PowerVR in just two months.
Both, NVidia and ATI told like half a year ago that they're implementing the Vulkan-API (back then OGL-Next) while it's designed in their drivers already. NVidia even went a step further, saying that they'll have a "day-1" release as soon as the API is stable for "all supported platforms", which I'd guess includes Linux.
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Quoting: SXXAs PS4 not yet hacked I have no idea about it, but PS3 have far more things from NetBSD rather than FreeBSD. Though it's not like real OS as there is very few libraries available and it's not use things like X server, audio servers, etc.
From what i've read, PS3 runs on a mix of FreeBSD and NetBSD....not sure which it relies on more than the other. Concerning PS4, its OrbisOS is mainly based of a modified FreeBSD 9.
Quoting: SXXJust like PS4 it's mainly used is proprietary api called GCM and PSGL is implemented on top of it. Of course PSGL is extremely crippled (OpenGL ES 1.0) and was never used for anything except few casual games.
Thanks for the correction. :) The PSSL is solely on PS4, though.
Since the PS4 hasn't been hacked yet, we don't know all it's inner workings. The following link does shed some light on some of the open-source software it uses:
http://www.scei.co.jp/ps4-license/
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There is a difference between PSGL and PSSL. One is an API, the other a shading language.
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I watched the video of GDC presentation of Vulkan and SPIR-V. Apparently AMD contibuted the Mantle code base as a foundation for the Vulkan API, and the lead developer of Vulkan is the previous AMD developer of Mantle, so they have contributed quite a lot already to the project. They have been credited as the main reason progress has been so swift.
What's interesting to me is that the whole industry - minus certain corporations - are really getting behind a next generation open source graphics technology and that will really help turn the microsoft monopoly into a walled garden instead and free up developers to ignore dxd
What's interesting to me is that the whole industry - minus certain corporations - are really getting behind a next generation open source graphics technology and that will really help turn the microsoft monopoly into a walled garden instead and free up developers to ignore dxd
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