1Dynamic API 2================================================================================ 3Originally posted by Ryan at: 4 https://plus.google.com/103391075724026391227/posts/TB8UfnDYu4U 5 6Background: 7 8- The Steam Runtime has (at least in theory) a really kick-ass build of SDL2, 9 but developers are shipping their own SDL2 with individual Steam games. 10 These games might stop getting updates, but a newer SDL2 might be needed later. 11 Certainly we'll always be fixing bugs in SDL, even if a new video target isn't 12 ever needed, and these fixes won't make it to a game shipping its own SDL. 13- Even if we replace the SDL2 in those games with a compatible one, that is to 14 say, edit a developer's Steam depot (yuck!), there are developers that are 15 statically linking SDL2 that we can't do this for. We can't even force the 16 dynamic loader to ignore their SDL2 in this case, of course. 17- If you don't ship an SDL2 with the game in some form, people that disabled the 18 Steam Runtime, or just tried to run the game from the command line instead of 19 Steam might find themselves unable to run the game, due to a missing dependency. 20- If you want to ship on non-Steam platforms like GOG or Humble Bundle, or target 21 generic Linux boxes that may or may not have SDL2 installed, you have to ship 22 the library or risk a total failure to launch. So now, you might have to have 23 a non-Steam build plus a Steam build (that is, one with and one without SDL2 24 included), which is inconvenient if you could have had one universal build 25 that works everywhere. 26- We like the zlib license, but the biggest complaint from the open source 27 community about the license change is the static linking. The LGPL forced this 28 as a legal, not technical issue, but zlib doesn't care. Even those that aren't 29 concerned about the GNU freedoms found themselves solving the same problems: 30 swapping in a newer SDL to an older game often times can save the day. 31 Static linking stops this dead. 32 33So here's what we did: 34 35SDL now has, internally, a table of function pointers. So, this is what SDL_Init 36now looks like: 37 38 UInt32 SDL_Init(Uint32 flags) 39 { 40 return jump_table.SDL_Init(flags); 41 } 42 43Except that is all done with a bunch of macro magic so we don't have to maintain 44every one of these. 45 46What is jump_table.SDL_init()? Eventually, that's a function pointer of the real 47SDL_Init() that you've been calling all this time. But at startup, it looks more 48like this: 49 50 Uint32 SDL_Init_DEFAULT(Uint32 flags) 51 { 52 SDL_InitDynamicAPI(); 53 return jump_table.SDL_Init(flags); 54 } 55 56SDL_InitDynamicAPI() fills in jump_table with all the actual SDL function 57pointers, which means that this _DEFAULT function never gets called again. 58First call to any SDL function sets the whole thing up. 59 60So you might be asking, what was the value in that? Isn't this what the operating 61system's dynamic loader was supposed to do for us? Yes, but now we've got this 62level of indirection, we can do things like this: 63 64 export SDL_DYNAMIC_API=/my/actual/libSDL-2.0.so.0 65 ./MyGameThatIsStaticallyLinkedToSDL2 66 67And now, this game that is statically linked to SDL, can still be overridden 68with a newer, or better, SDL. The statically linked one will only be used as 69far as calling into the jump table in this case. But in cases where no override 70is desired, the statically linked version will provide its own jump table, 71and everyone is happy. 72 73So now: 74- Developers can statically link SDL, and users can still replace it. 75 (We'd still rather you ship a shared library, though!) 76- Developers can ship an SDL with their game, Valve can override it for, say, 77 new features on SteamOS, or distros can override it for their own needs, 78 but it'll also just work in the default case. 79- Developers can ship the same package to everyone (Humble Bundle, GOG, etc), 80 and it'll do the right thing. 81- End users (and Valve) can update a game's SDL in almost any case, 82 to keep abandoned games running on newer platforms. 83- Everyone develops with SDL exactly as they have been doing all along. 84 Same headers, same ABI. Just get the latest version to enable this magic. 85 86 87A little more about SDL_InitDynamicAPI(): 88 89Internally, InitAPI does some locking to make sure everything waits until a 90single thread initializes everything (although even SDL_CreateThread() goes 91through here before spinning a thread, too), and then decides if it should use 92an external SDL library. If not, it sets up the jump table using the current 93SDL's function pointers (which might be statically linked into a program, or in 94a shared library of its own). If so, it loads that library and looks for and 95calls a single function: 96 97 SInt32 SDL_DYNAPI_entry(Uint32 version, void *table, Uint32 tablesize); 98 99That function takes a version number (more on that in a moment), the address of 100the jump table, and the size, in bytes, of the table. 101Now, we've got policy here: this table's layout never changes; new stuff gets 102added to the end. Therefore SDL_DYNAPI_entry() knows that it can provide all 103the needed functions if tablesize <= sizeof its own jump table. If tablesize is 104bigger (say, SDL 2.0.4 is trying to load SDL 2.0.3), then we know to abort, but 105if it's smaller, we know we can provide the entire API that the caller needs. 106 107The version variable is a failsafe switch. 108Right now it's always 1. This number changes when there are major API changes 109(so we know if the tablesize might be smaller, or entries in it have changed). 110Right now SDL_DYNAPI_entry gives up if the version doesn't match, but it's not 111inconceivable to have a small dispatch library that only supplies this one 112function and loads different, otherwise-incompatible SDL libraries and has the 113right one initialize the jump table based on the version. For something that 114must generically catch lots of different versions of SDL over time, like the 115Steam Client, this isn't a bad option. 116 117Finally, I'm sure some people are reading this and thinking, 118"I don't want that overhead in my project!" 119To which I would point out that the extra function call through the jump table 120probably wouldn't even show up in a profile, but lucky you: this can all be 121disabled. You can build SDL without this if you absolutely must, but we would 122encourage you not to do that. However, on heavily locked down platforms like 123iOS, or maybe when debugging, it makes sense to disable it. The way this is 124designed in SDL, you just have to change one #define, and the entire system 125vaporizes out, and SDL functions exactly like it always did. Most of it is 126macro magic, so the system is contained to one C file and a few headers. 127However, this is on by default and you have to edit a header file to turn it 128off. Our hopes is that if we make it easy to disable, but not too easy, 129everyone will ultimately be able to get what they want, but we've gently 130nudged everyone towards what we think is the best solution. 131