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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
ui-mock
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Rust hello world app for Windows 95, cross-compiled from Linux, no MSVC
It's quite possible to develop Rust for Windows without using Windows.
Try my open source "ui-mock".[1] This is a test of the cross-platform stack. Just get the repository with "git clone", and make sure you have Rust installed for target "x86_64-pc-windows-gnu". See the Cargo.toml file for build instructions.
This is a game-type user interface. It's just some menus and a 3D cube. It doesn't do much, but it exercises all the lower levels. This allows debugging cross-platform problems in a simple environment. The main crates used are winit (cross-plaform window event handling), wgpu (cross-plaform GPU handling), rfd (cross-platform file dialogs), keychain (cross-platform password storage), egui (Rust-native menus and dialogs), and rend3 (safe interface to wgpu). For graphics, it uses Vulkan, so it will run on Windows back to the last release of Windows 7. Not Windows 95, though; it's 64-bit. It will also run under Wine, so you don't even need a Windows system to test.
My metaverse client uses the same stack. It's compiled on Linux, and runs on both Linux and Windows. So I'm building a high-performance 3D graphics program for Windows without even owning a Windows system or using any Microsoft software.
[1] https://github.com/John-Nagle/ui-mock
- Really frustrated. [Warning: Bit of a negative rant]
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We're still not game, but there has been progress. A progress report.
Profiling on the CPU side is well handled by tracy, which is a game-oriented profiler. My programs render-bench and ui-mock are prepped for Tracy, as is Rend3, so you can try it out on them.
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We're not really game yet.
ui-mock -- game GUI test fixture This exercises rfd->egui->rend3->wgpu. It's a game GUI with menus and dialogs, but no game behind it, just a 3D drawing of a cube. It's useful for making bugs in that stack repeatable. That's been helpful in wringing out obscure bugs in egui.
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Kind of quiet. So, my wishlist
Egui works well with Rend3. Here's my example and library for that. It's a dummy game UI; no game, but brings up menus atop Rend3 3D. Egui is very low level. Each dialog takes a lot of code. Something to generate dialogs from some kind of template would be useful. I have many of those to do. Incidentally, does anyone have examples of good color themes for egui? The default is shades of black on black, which is a bit harsh. I'd like to see some examples where the aesthetics are better.
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My Return to Desktop Applications
There's an attempt to make this work for Rust desktop applications. There's the winit crate, which does cross-platform windowing and event loops. There's egui, for menus and subwindows. There's rfd, for file dialogs, which are special for security reasons. And there's wgpu, for cross-platform 3D.
I'm using all of these in my ui-mock,[1] which is a GUI for a game without the game. It has 3D graphics with 2D GUI elements on top. I'm using this to shake down all the cross-platform problems for my metaverse client. My own code, which is 100% safe Rust, has no platform dependent code.
Results are pretty good. There's minor dirty laundry in those libraries, which has been reported to the various maintainers. Stuff like this:
- You can get a file dialog hidden behind the main window, which, in a full screen program, is a real problem. Mostly a Linux problem; works fine on Windows.
- Full screen on Windows mode under Wine 7 crashes Wine. Known Wine bug.
- Warnings from WGPU, but it works around all of them with some minor performance loss.
- Cross-platform packaging, to make a Windows installer without Windows, isn't implemented yet.
So, not big stuff. A lot of stuff works that you might not expect to work, such as profiling with tracy. Wgpu is taking care of Vulkan vs Apple's Metal. (Apple just had to Think Different, to the annoyance of everybody doing 3D.) Opening a web page in the default browser is cross-platform. You can cross-compile - I build the Windows version on Linux, without using any Microsoft tools.
With some more work, I could make this work on WASM and Android as well, but that requires some special casing, mostly because WASM doesn't have proper threads.
So cross-platform desktop development is working pretty well. Most of the problems I'm running into would not appear in a more typical application.
[1] https://github.com/John-Nagle/ui-mock
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Godot + Rust dev in MacOS
I have a Rend3/Egui/WGPU program, https://github.com/John-Nagle/ui-mock
Ambient
- FLaNK Stack Weekly 09 Oct 2023
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Show HN: Ambient, a multiplayer game engine and platform using WASM/WebGPU/Rust
Hi, this is Kuba from Ambient team, I work on Ambient backend.
The servers in question are part of the main Ambient application [0]. The server part is open-source just like the rest of the engine. You can start your own server using native build of Ambient (check cli help for `ambient serve`).
As for the orchestration and creating servers on demand, we are using Kubernetes and Agones [1]. Both of them are open too. We just have a thin API server that receives requests that a server is needed, checks if there's already one running and if not it uses Agones to allocate one.
[0]: https://github.com/AmbientRun/Ambient
- How do I run multiple "game rooms" in Bevy / Renet / Rapier on the server?
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Bevy and WebGPU
Intriguing development! It's quite refreshing to witness Bevy hopping onto the WebGPU bandwagon. I can't help but wonder about the complexity involved in transitioning an existing codebase from WebGL to WebGPU in such a compressed timeline.
On a similar note, Ambient (https://github.com/AmbientRun/Ambient) has been on my radar for their utilization of WebGPU, though they seemingly lack a tangible web demo. Anyone have any insights or comparisons to share?
- Ambient 0.2 – Multiplayer games and apps with Rust, WebAssembly and WebGPU
- Ambient – The Rust Multiplayer Game Engine Releases 0.2
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Ambient 0.2: multiplayer UI, sound, clientside WASM, and more
- Finally, our UI framework, Ambient UI, can now be used from guest code. Combined with our networking and ECS, this unlocks an exciting new capability: multiplayer UI!
In the blog post, we walk through the creation of a basic multiplayer beat sequencer using these features. We're excited to see what else the community can cook up :)
- Download: <https://github.com/AmbientRun/Ambient/releases/tag/v0.2.0>
Download: https://github.com/AmbientRun/Ambient/releases/tag/v0.2.0
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Does anyone here work in gamedev with Rust as their primary language?
I work on Ambient, an open-source platform for streamed[1] multiplayer games written entirely in Rust. We're a Swedish startup that supports remote and we're hiring for self-starters - if you think you can flourish in a startup environment, feel free to apply!
What are some alternatives?
couchbase-lite-C - C language bindings for the Couchbase Lite embedded NoSQL database engine
jpeg2000-decoder - Decodes JPEG 2000 images in a subprocess, for safety
openjpeg - Official repository of the OpenJPEG project
renet - Server/Client network library for multiplayer games with authentication and connection management made with Rust
rend3 - Easy to use, customizable, efficient 3D renderer library built on wgpu.
bevy - A refreshingly simple data-driven game engine built in Rust
cargo-bundle - Wrap rust executables in OS-specific app bundles
wgpu - Cross-platform, safe, pure-rust graphics api.
ttrss-sandstorm - Sandstorm port of Tiny Tiny RSS
piston - A modular game engine written in Rust
thirdroom - Open, decentralised, immersive worlds built on Matrix