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TinyGL for MinGW (c) 2022 Fabrice Bellard.

Prerequisites

msys2

Build

MINGW64 ~/src$ cd TinyGL/src
MINGW64 ~/src/TinyGL/src$ mingw32-make -f build.mak

...

MINGW64 ~/src/TinyGL/src$ cd ../examples
MINGW64 ~/src/TinyGL/examples$ mingw32-make

...

Test

MINGW64 ~/src/TinyGL/examples$ ./gears.exe


TinyGL : a Small, Free and Fast Subset of OpenGL*

News

  • (Mar 5 2022) TinyGL 0.4.1 is out (Changelog)
  • (Mar 17 2002) TinyGL 0.4 is out (Changelog)

Download

Get it: TinyGL-0.4.1.tar.gz

Introduction

TinyGL is intended to be a very small implementation of a subset of OpenGL* for embedded systems or games. It is a software only implementation. Only the main OpenGL calls are implemented.

The main strength of TinyGL is that it is fast and simple because it does not have to be completely compatible with OpenGL. In particular, the texture mapping and the geometrical transformations are very fast. TinyGL is a lot faster than Mesa or the software Solaris OpenWin OpenGL implementation for the VReng Virtual Reality enginefor example.

The main features of TinyGL are:

  • Header compatible with OpenGL (the headers are adapted from the very good Mesa by Brian Paul et al.)
  • Zlib-like licence for easy integration in commercial designs (read the LICENCE file).
  • Subset of GLX for easy testing with X Window.
  • GLX like API (NGLX) to use it with NanoX.
  • Subset of BGLView under BeOS (thank to Peder Blekken).
  • OpenGL like lightening.
  • Limited support of OpenGL 1.1 arrays.
  • Complete OpenGL selection mode handling for object picking.
  • 16 bit Z buffer. 16 bit RGB display. High speed dithering to paletted 8 bits if needed. High speed convertion to 24 or 32 bits.
  • Fast Gouraud shadding optimized for 16 bit RGB.
  • Fast texture mapping capabilities, with perspective correction and texture objects.
  • 32 bit float only arithmetic.
  • Very small: compiled code size of about 40 kB on x86.
  • C sources for GCC on 32/64 bit architectures. It has been tested succesfully on x86-Linux and sparc-Solaris.

Architecture

TinyGL is made up four main modules:

  • Mathematical routines (zmath).
  • OpenGL-like emulation (zgl).
  • Z buffer and rasterisation (zbuffer).
  • GLX interface (zglx). To use TinyGL in an embedded system, you should look at the GLX layer and modify it to suit your need. Adding a more user friendly developper layer (as in Mesa) may be useful.

Why ?

TinyGL was developped as a student project for a Virtual Reality network system called VReng (see the VReng project).

At that time (January 1997), my initial project was to write my own 3D rasterizer based on some old sources I wrote. But I realized that it would be better to use OpenGL to work on any platform. My problem was that I wanted to use texture mapping which was (and is still) quite slower on many software OpenGL implementation. I could have modified Mesa to suit my needs, but I really wanted to use my old sources for that project.

I finally decided to use the same syntax as OpenGL but with my own libraries, thinking that later it could ease the porting of VReng to OpenGL.

Now VReng is at last compatible with OpenGL, and I managed to patch TinyGL so that VReng can still work with it without any modifications.

Since TinyGL may be useful for some people, especially in the world of embedded designs, I decided to release it 'as is', otherwise, it would have been lost on my hard disk !

* OpenGL(R) is a registered trademark of Silicon Graphics, Inc.