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glslc Manual

1. Name

glslc - A command-line GLSL/HLSL to SPIR-V compiler with Clang-compatible arguments.

2. Synopsis

glslc [--help]

glslc [--show-limits]

glslc [-c|-S|-E]
      [-x ...] [-std=standard]
      [-fauto-bind-uniforms]
      [-fentry-point=...]
      [-flimit=...]
      [-fshader-stage=...]
      [--target-env=...]
      [-g]
      [-O0|-Os]
      [-Idirectory...]
      [-Dmacroname[=value]...]
      [-w] [-Werror]
      [-o outfile]
      shader...

3. Description

3.1. Input file languages

glslc accepts both GLSL/HLSL source and SPIR-V assembly files as inputs.

3.1.1. Shader stage specification

glslc provides three ways to specify the shader stage of a GLSL source file: -fshader-stage=<stage>, #pragma shader_stage(<stage>), and file extension. The -fshader-stage= option overrides #pragma shader_stage(), which overrides the file extension.

Shader stages can be specified by naming a file with an appropriate extension as shown in the following table. -fshader-stage= and #pragma shader_stage(), on the other hand, enable you to specify shader stages from the command line and within the source file. Possible stages for them are also listed in the following table. Details about -fshader-stage= can be found in its own section.

Table 1. Shader Stage Selection
Shader Stage Shader File Extension <stage>

vertex

.vert

vertex

fragment

.frag

fragment

tesselation control

.tesc

tesscontrol

tesselation evaluation

.tese

tesseval

geometry

.geom

geometry

compute

.comp

compute

#pragma shader_stage() relies on the #pragma preprocessor directive; thus, the token inside shader_stage() is not subject to preprocessor macro expansion. It must be exactly one of the stages in the above table.

#pragma shader_stage() behaves as follows:

  • The first #pragma shader_stage() directive in a translation unit must precede any non-preprocessor tokens.

  • If there is more than one #pragma shader_stage() directive in the same translation unit, all the stages specified must be the same. Otherwise, glslc will issue an error.

3.1.2. SPIR-V assembly files

SPIR-V assembly input files should follow the syntax defined in the SPIRV-Tools project and have the .spvasm extension. Command line options treat SPIR-V assembly files differently; some may ignore them, e.g., -E, -S, and some may even treat them not as SPIR-V assembly files, e.g., -fshader-stage=.

3.2. Output file naming

If a name is specified via -o, the output file will be given that name. Otherwise,

  • If a compilation stage selection option is given (-S or -c), there will be one output file generated per input shader file. The generated output file will end with a file extension that matches the compilation stage, which is .spvasm for -S and .spv for -c. The name will depend on the original file’s name and extension.

    • If the input file has a shader stage selection extension, the output file will be named as by appending the file extension for the compilation stage to the input file’s name. E.g., glslc -c foo.vert will generate foo.vert.spv, and glslc -s bar.frag will generate bar.frag.spvasm.

    • Otherwise, the output file will be named as by replacing the input file’s file extension, if any, with the file extension for the compilation stage. E.g., glslc -c foo will generate foo.spv, and glslc -s bar.glsl will generate bar.spvasm.

  • If no compilation stage is selected, the output file will be named a.spv.

4. Command Line Options

4.1. Overall Options

4.1.1. --help

--help tells the glslc compiler to display all available options and exit.

4.1.2. --show-limits

--show-limits shows default resource limits for shader compilation. The syntax is the same as accepted by -flimit= and for the contents of the file specified by -flimit-file.

4.1.3. -o

-o lets you specify the output file’s name. It cannot be used when there are multiple files generated. A filename of - represents standard output.

4.2. Language and Mode Selection Options

4.2.1. -fauto-bind-uniforms

Option -fauto-bind-uniforms directs the compiler to automatically assign binding numbers to uniform variables, when an explicit binding is not specified in the shader source.

An explicit binding number can be specified in the shader source by using a binding layout qualifier. For example:

layout(binding = 12) uniform texture2D;

4.2.2. -fentry-point=

-fentry-point=<name> lets you specify the entry point name. This is only significant for HLSL compilation. The default is "main".

4.2.3. -flimit=

-flimit=<resource-limits> lets you specify resource limits. The argument should be a sequence of limit name, integer value pairs. Tokens should be separated by whitespace. If the same limit is specified several times, only the last setting takes effect.

Use --show-limits to show the default values, and example syntax.

This option affects all compiled shaders.

4.2.4. -flimit-file

-flimit-file <resource-limits-file> lets you specify resource limits in a file. The syntax of the file contents is the same as the argument to -flimit= and the output of --show-limits. This option accepts Glslang resource configuration files, e.g. as emitted by glslangValidator -c.

This option affects all compiled shaders.

4.2.5. -fshader-stage=

-fshader-stage=<stage> lets you specify the shader stage for one or more inputs from the command line.

Possible values for <stage> are listed in the Shader Stage Selection table.

-fshader-stage= behaves as follows:

  • -fshader-stage= sets the shader stage for subsequent input files. It does not affect the stages of any preceding inputs on the command line.

  • When supplying more than one -fshader-stage= argument, the most recent argument preceding an input file applies.

  • A shader file not ending with known shader file extensions must have a -fshader-stage= argument ahead of it to specify its stage.

  • If there is a -fshader-stage= before a file in which there is a #pragma shader_stage() directive, the directive is ignored and the -fshader-stage= argument is used instead.

  • If there is a -fshader-stage= before a file with a known shader file extension, the file extension is ignored and the -fshader-stage= argument is used instead.

Caution
-fshader-stage= overrides file extension; that means it should not be used together with SPIR-V assembly files because glslc will treat the given SPIR-V assembly files as GLSL source code of the given shader stage. If you need to supply both SPIR-V assembly files and -fshader-stage= on the same command line, please put SPIR-V assembly files ahead of the first -fshader-stage=, since -fshader-stage= only affects the treatment of subsequent files.

4.2.6. -std=

-std=<value> lets you specify a shader version and profile on the command line. <value> can be any valid concatenation of a GLSL version number and profile, e.g., 310es, 450core, etc. The profile can be omitted as allowed by GLSL, e.g., 450.

-std= behaves as follows:

  • -std= affects the version of all GLSL inputs passed to glslc.

  • -std= is ignored for HLSL inputs.

  • -std= overwrites #version directives in all input shaders, including those preceding the argument.

  • If a -std= argument specifies a different version from a #version directive in an input file, glslc will issue a warning.

  • If multiple -std= arguments are specified on the command line, only the last one takes effect.

Caution
-std= does not affect the #version directive in the preprocessed output. That is, when -std= specifies a version different from the shader source code, the #version directive in preprocessed output will still be the one in the source code. But -std= does affect the behavior of #line directives in the preprocessed output. Behavior of #line directives will follow the version specified by -std=.

4.2.7. --target-env=

--target-env=<value> lets you specify a target environment on the command line. This affects the generation of warnings and errors. <value> can be one of the following:

  • vulkan: create SPIR-V under Vulkan semantics.

  • opengl: create SPIR-V under OpenGL semantics.

  • opengl_compat: create SPIR-V under OpenGL semantics, including compatibility profile functions.

By default, the <value> is set to vulkan and the compiler creates SPIR-V under Vulkan semantics.

4.2.8. -x

-x lets you specify the language of the input shader files. Valid languages are glsl and hlsl. If the file extension is hlsl then the default language is HLSL. Otherwise the default is 'glsl'.

4.3. Compilation Stage Selection Options

4.3.1. -c

-c tells the glslc compiler to run the preprocessing and compiling stage. Each input shader file results in a SPIR-V binary file; these SPIR-V binary files are named by the rules in the Output File Naming section.

4.3.2. -E

-E tells the glslc compiler to run only the preprocessing stage. It overrides -c and -S. Preprocessed output is written to standard output, while preprocessing errors are written to standard error. If multiple input shader files are given, their preprocessed output are all written to standard output, in the order specified on the command line.

glslc will do nothing for SPIR-V assembly files with this option.

4.3.3. -S

-S tells the glslc compiler to run the preprocessing, compiling, and then disassembling stage. It overrides -c. Each input shader file results in a SPIR-V assembly file; these SPIR-V assembly files are named by the rules in the Output File Naming section.

glslc will do nothing for SPIR-V assembly files with this option.

4.3.4. No Compilation Stage Selection

If none of the above options is given, the glslc compiler will run preprocessing, compiling, and linking stages.

Warning
Linking of multiple input shader files are not supported yet.

4.4. Preprocessor Options

4.4.1. -D

-Dmacroname[=[value]] lets you define a preprocessor macro before input shader files are preprocessed. If value is omitted, the macro is defined with an empty value.

4.4.2. -I

-Idirectory or -I directory adds the specified directory to the search path for include files. The directory may be an absolute path or a relative path to the current working directory.

4.5. Code Generation Options

4.5.1. -g

Requests that the compiler place source-level debug information into the object code, such as identifier names and line numbers.

This option restrains -O from turning on the strip-debug-info optimization pass.

Note
Currently this option has no effect. Full functionality depends on glslang support for generating debug info.

4.5.2. -O0, -Os

-O specifies which optimization level to use:

  • -O0 means "no optimization". This level generates the most debuggable code.

  • -Os enables optimizations to reduce code size.

4.5.3. -mfmt=<format>

-mfmt=<format> selects output format for compilation output in SPIR-V binary code form. Supported options are listed in the binary output format options table. This option is only valid to be used when the compilation output is SPIR-V binary code. Specifying any options listed below when the output is not SPIR-V binary code, like disassembly (with -S specified), text (with -M, -MM or -E specified) will trigger an error.

Table 2. Binary Output Format Options
Format option Description

bin

Output SPIR-V binary code as a sequence of binary 32-bitwords in host native endianness. This is the default format for SPIR-V binary compilation output.

num

Output SPIR-V binary code as a text file containing a list of comma-separated hex numbers.
Example: glslc -c -mfmt=num main.vert -o output_file.txt
Content of the output_file.txt:
0x07230203,0x00010000,0x00080001,0x00000006…​

c

Output SPIR-V binary code as a text file containing C-style
initializer list.
This is just wrapping the output of num option with curly brackets.
Example: glslc -c -mfmt=c main.vert -o output_file.txt
Content of output_file.txt:
{0x07230203, 0x00010000, 0x00080001, 0x00000006…​}

4.6. Warning and Error Options

4.6.1. -w

-w suppresses all warning output from glslc. Any warning that would have been generated is silently ignored.

4.6.2. -Werror

-Werror forces any warning to be treated as an error in glslc. This means that all warning: messages are shown as error: and any warnings will cause a non-zero exit code from glslc. If -w is specified the warnings generated are suppressed before they are converted to errors.

4.7. Dependency Generation Options

4.7.1. -M or -MM

-M generates make dependencies. It outputs a rule suitable for make describing the dependencies of the input file. Instead of outputting the result of preprocessing, the preprocessor outputs one make rule containing the SPIR-V object file name for that source file, a colon, and the names of all the included files.

Unless specified explicitly (with -MT), the SPIR-V object file name in the generated make rules follows the rules of Output File Naming as in -c compilation stage.

Specifying -M implies -E, and suppresses warnings with an implicit -w. By default the output will be written to stdout, unless -MF or -o is specified.

The dependency info file name can be specified by -o and -MF options. When both are specified, -o option is ignored.

Specifying multiple input files is valid when the make rules are written to stdout, which means neither -MF nor -o is specified. When -o or -MF is specified, only one input file is allowed.

-MM is an alias for -M.

E.g., glslc -M main.vert will dump main.vert.spv: main.vert <other included files> to stdout. More examples are listed in Dependency Generation Examples

4.7.2. -MD

-MD tells the glslc compiler to both compile the source and generate make dependencies. Dependencies are written to a file whose name is determined as follows: If option -MF is specified, use its argument. Otherwise, use the filename formed by appending .d to the name of the file containing compilation results.

Specifying multiple input files is valid when neither -MF nor -o is specified. When -o or -MF is specified, only one input file is allowed.

E.g., glslc -c -MD main.vert will generate main.vert.spv as the SPIR-V object file and main.vert.spv.d as the dependency info file. More examples are listed in Dependency Generation Examples

4.7.3. -MF

-MF lets you specify the dependency info file name when used with -M or -MD. This option is invalid when used with multiple input files.

E.g., glslc -c -MD main.vert -MF dep_info will generate main.vert.spv as the SPIR-V object file and dep_info as the dependency info file.

4.7.4. -MT

-MT lets you specify the target of the rule emitted by dependency generation when used with -M or -MD. This option is invalid when used with multiple input files.

E.g., glslc -M main.vert -MT target will dump following dependency info to stdout: target: main.vert <other dependent files>.

Table 3. Dependency Generation Examples
Command Line Input Compilation Output File Dependency Output File Dependency Info

glslc -M main.vert

<NA>

<Stdout>

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -M a.vert b.vert

<NA>

<Stdout>

a.vert.spv: a.vert

<NA>

<Stdout>

b.vert.spv: b.vert

glslc -M main.vert -o dep_info

<NA>

dep_info

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -M main.vert -MF dep_info

<NA>

dep_info

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -M main.vert -MT target

<NA>

<Stdout>

target: main.vert

glslc -MD main.vert

a.spv

main.vert.spv.d

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -c -MD main.vert

main.vert.spv

main.vert.spv.d

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -c -MD a.vert b.vert

a.vert.spv

a.vert.spv.d

a.vert.spv: a.vert

b.vert.spv

b.vert.spv.d

b.vert.spv: b.vert

glslc -S -MD main.vert

main.vert.spvasm

main.vert.spvasm.d

main.vert.spvasm: main.vert

glslc -c -MD main.vert -MF dep_info

main.vert.spv

dep_info

main.vert.spv: main.vert

glslc -c -MD main.vert -o obj

obj

obj.d

obj: main.vert

glslc -c -MD main.vert -o obj -MF dep_info -MT target

obj

dep_info

target: main.vert

5. Divergence from and extensions to GLSL specifications

5.1. Source-filename-based #line and __FILE__

This section describes how the glslc compiler extends the syntax for the #line directive and the __FILE__ macro. By default, the glslc compiler enables the GL_GOOGLE_cpp_style_line_directive extension. It will generate this extended syntax in the preprocessed output (obtained via the -E option).

Warning
This section is still evolving. Expect changes.

GLSL specifications have a notion of source strings.

The source for a single shader is an array of strings of characters from the character set. A single shader is made from the concatenation of these strings.

— Section 3.2 of both version 3.30 and 4.50

With the above notion, the second parameter to the #line directive should be a constant integer expressions representing the source string number. Also the __FILE__ macro will "substitute a decimal integer constant that says which source string number is currently being processed."

The glslc compiler implements the standard #line and __FILE__ syntax. It also provides an extension, GL_GOOGLE_cpp_style_line_directive, to allow source filenames to be used instead of integer source string indices. Specifically, the #line directive can have, after macro substitution, one of the following three forms:

#line line-number
#line line-number integer-source-string-index
#line line-number "source-filename"

where source-filename can be any combinations of characters except double quotation marks. (Note that according to the GLSL specification, "there are no escape sequences or other uses of the backslash beyond use as the line-continuation character".)

And if source-filename-based #line is used, the __FILE__ macro expands to a string whose contents are the filename quoted with double quotation marks. The filename is dertermined as the last of

  • The filename given to the glslc compiler,

  • The filename argument of the most recent #line directive, if any.

5.2. #include

The glslc compiler extends GLSL with the include syntax by turning on the GL_GOOGLE_include_directive extension. It will preprocess and substitute #include directives properly with the following behaviors.

Warning
This section is still evolving. Expect changes.

If #include directives are used in a shader, there will be an #extension GL_GOOGLE_include_directive : enable line generated into the preprocessed output.

The GL_GOOGLE_cpp_style_line_directive extension is implicitly turned on by the GL_GOOGLE_include_directive extension.

The file argument to #include must be enclosed in double quotes. It must be a relative path, using whatever path separator the OS supports. However, the last path element — the name of the file itself — must not contain either '/' or '\', regardless of which path separator is used. This will not be flagged as an error but will instead trigger undefined behavior. For example, let’s say there is a file named f\ilename.vert on a Unix OS. It is not possible to craft a #include that includes that file.

Furthermore, it is not possible to escape any characters in a #include directive, so the file argument cannot contain any special characters that need escaping in C.

The file argument is a relative path that is matched first against the including file’s own directory and then against all -I arguments in order of their appearance on the command line. If the file cannot be found, glslc aborts with an error.