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Static & dynamic D bindings to SDL and the SDL_* libraries, compatible with BetterC, @nogc, and nothrow.

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BindBC-SDL

This project provides a set of both static and dynamic bindings to SDL (Simple DirectMedia Layer) and its official extension libraries. They are compatible with @nogc and nothrow, and can be compiled with BetterC compatibility. This package is intended to replace DerelictSDL2, which does not provide the same level of compatibility.

Table of Contents
License
SDL documentation
Quickstart guide
Configurations
Library versions
Special platforms
Windows: Loading from outside the DLL search path

License

BindBC-SDL—as well as every other binding in the BindBC project—is licensed under the Boost Software License.

Bear in mind that you still need to abide by SDL's license, and the licenses of any SDL_* libraries that you use through these bindings.

SDL documentation

This readme describes how to use BindBC-SDL, not SDL itself. BindBC-SDL is a direct D binding to the SDL API, so any existing SDL documentation and tutorials can be adapted with only minor modifications.

Note

The bindings for SDL_atomics.h have not been thoroughly tested. If the SDL_atomics binding causes trouble and you don't need to use it, you can supply the version identifier SDL_No_Atomics and the module's contents will not be compiled. If it's causing trouble and you need it, please report an issue.

Quickstart guide

To use BindBC-SDL in your dub project, add it to the list of dependencies in your dub configuration file. The easiest way is by running dub add bindbc-sdl in your project folder. The result should look like this:

Example dub.json

"dependencies": {
	"bindbc-sdl": "~>1.3.0",
},

Example dub.sdl

dependency "bindbc-sdl" version="~>1.3.0"

By default, BindBC-SDL is configured to compile as a dynamic binding that is not BetterC-compatible. If you prefer static bindings or need BetterC compatibility, they can be enabled via subConfigurations in your dub configuration file. For configuration naming & more details, see Configurations.

Example dub.json

"subConfigurations": {
	"bindbc-sdl": "staticBC",
},

Example dub.sdl

subConfiguration "bindbc-sdl" "staticBC"

If you need to use the SDL_* libraries, or versions of SDL newer than 2.0.0, then you will have to add the appropriate version identifiers to versions in your dub configuration. For a list of library version identifiers, see Library versions.

If using static bindings, then you will also need to add the name of each library you're using to libs.

Example dub.json

"versions": [
	"SDL_2014", "SDL_Net_200",
],
"libs": [
	"SDL2", "SDL2_net",
],

Example dub.sdl

versions "SDL_2014" "SDL_Net_200"
libs "SDL2" "SDL2_net"

If you're using static bindings: import bindbc.sdl in your code, and then you can use all of SDL just like you would in C. That's it!

import bindbc.sdl;

void main(){
	SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO);
	
	//etc.
	
	SDL_Quit();
}

If you're using dynamic bindings: you need to load each library you need with the appropriate load function.

For most use cases, it's best to use BindBC-Loader's error handling API to see if there were any errors while loading the libraries. This information can be written to a log file before aborting the program.

The load function will also return a member of the SDLSupport enum (or equivalent: e.g. SDLNetSupport for SDL_net) which can be used for debugging:

  • noLibrary means the library couldn't be found.
  • badLibrary means there was an error while loading the library.
  • A version number means that SDL was loaded, however this version number currently does not correspond to which version of SDL was loaded. Instead, please use SDL_GetVersion() for SDL, IMG_Linked_Version() for SDL_image, Mix_Linked_Version() for SDL_mixer, SDLNet_Linked_Version() for SDL_net, or TTF_Linked_Version() for SDL_ttf.

Here's a simple example using only the load function's return value:

import bindbc.sdl;

/*
This code attempts to load the SDL shared library using
well-known variations of the library name for the host system.
`sdlSupport` is an `SDLSupport` version corresponding to the
configured library version. (via SDL_204, SDL_2010 etc.)
*/
SDLSupport ret = loadSDL();
if(ret != sdlSupport){
	/*
	Error handling. For most use cases, it's best to use the error handling API in
	BindBC-Loader to retrieve error messages for logging and then abort.
	If necessary, it's possible to determine the root cause via the return value:
	*/
	if(ret == SDLSupport.noLibrary){
		//The SDL shared library failed to load
	}else if(ret == SDLSupport.badLibrary){
		/*
		One or more symbols failed to load. The likely cause is that
		the shared library is for a lower version than BindBC-SDL was
		configured to load.
		*/
	}
}

/*
This code attempts to load the SDL library using a user-supplied file name.
Usually, the name and/or path used will be platform specific, as in this
example which attempts to load `sdl2.dll` from the `libs` subdirectory,
relative to the executable, only on Windows.
*/
version(Windows) loadSDL("libs/sdl2.dll");

The error handling API in BindBC-Loader can be used to log error messages:

import bindbc.sdl;

/*
Import the sharedlib module for error handling. Assigning an alias ensures that the
function names do not conflict with other public APIs. This isn't strictly necessary,
but the API names are common enough that they could appear in other packages.
*/
import loader = bindbc.loader.sharedlib;

bool loadLib(){
	LoadMsg ret = loadSDL();
	if(ret != sdlSupport){
		//Log the error info
		foreach(info; loader.errors){
			/*
			A hypothetical logging function. Note that `info.error` and
			`info.message` are `const(char)*`, not `string`.
			*/
			logError(info.error, info.message);
		}
		
		//Optionally construct a user-friendly error message for the user
		string msg;
		if(ret == SDLSupport.noLibrary){
			msg = "This application requires the SDL library.";
		}else{
			SDL_version version;
			SDL_GetVersion(&version);
			msg = "Your SDL version is too low: "~
				itoa(version.major)~"."~
				itoa(version.minor)~"."~
				itoa(version.patch)~
				". Please upgrade to 2.0.14 .";
		}
		//A hypothetical message box function
		showMessageBox(msg);
		return false;
	}
	return true;
}

Configurations

BindBC-SDL has the following configurations:

DRuntime BetterC
Dynamic dynamic dynamicBC
Static static staticBC

For projects that don't use dub, if BindBC-SDL is compiled for static bindings then the version identifier BindSDL_Static must be passed to your compiler when building your project.

Note

The version identifier BindBC_Static can be used to configure all of the official BindBC packages used in your program. (i.e. those maintained in the BindBC GitHub organization) Some third-party BindBC packages may support it as well.

Dynamic bindings

The dynamic bindings have no link-time dependency on the SDL libraries, so the SDL shared libraries must be manually loaded at runtime from the shared library search path of the user's system. On Windows, this is typically handled by distributing the SDL DLLs with your program. On other systems, it usually means installing the SDL shared libraries through a package manager.

It is recommended that you always select the minimum version you require and no higher. If a lower version is loaded then it's still possible to call functions available in that lower version, but any calls to functions from versions between that version and the one you configured will result in a null pointer access. For example, if you configured SDL to 2.0.4 (SDL_204) but loaded SDL 2.0.2 at runtime, then any function pointers from 2.0.3 and 2.0.4 will be null. For this reason, it's recommended to always specify your required version of the SDL library at compile time and unconditionally abort when you receive an SDLSupport.badLibrary return value from loadSDL (or equivalent).

The function isSDLLoaded returns true if any version of the shared library has been loaded and false if not. unloadSDL can be used to unload a successfully loaded shared library. The SDL_* libraries provide similar functions: isSDLImageLoaded, unloadSDLImage, etc.

Static bindings

Static bindings do not require static linking. The static bindings have a link-time dependency on either the shared or static SDL libraries and any satellite SDL libraries the program uses. On Windows, you can link with the static libraries or, to use the DLLs, the import libraries. On other systems, you can link with either the static libraries or directly with the shared libraries.

When linking with the shared (or import) libraries, there is a runtime dependency on the shared library just as there is when using the dynamic bindings. The difference is that the shared libraries are no longer loaded manually—loading is handled automatically by the system when the program is launched. Attempting to call loadSDL with the static bindings enabled will result in a compilation error.

Static linking requires the SDL development packages be installed on your system. The SDL download page provides development packages for Windows and macOS. You can also install them via your system's package manager. For example, on Debian-based Linux distributions sudo apt install libsdl2-dev will install both the development and runtime packages.

When linking with the static libraries, there is no runtime dependency on SDL. The SDL homepage does not distribute pre-compiled static libraries. If you decide to obtain static libraries from another source (usually by compiling them yourself) you will also need to ensure that you link with all of SDL's link-time dependencies (such as the OpenGL library and system API libraries).

Library Versions

These are the supported versions of each SDL_* library, along with the corresponding version identifiers to add to your dub configuration or pass to the compiler.

Note

It is necessary to specify only a single version identifier per library. For example, SDL_Image_204 by itself will activate the SDL_image binding.

Previously, there were identifiers for the SDL_* libraries with no version. (SDL_Image, SDL_TTF, etc.) These are are now deprecated due to their ambiguity and older projects are encouraged to remove them.

SDL versions

Version Version identifier
2.0.0 (none; default)
2.0.1 SDL_201
2.0.2 SDL_202
2.0.3 SDL_203
2.0.4 SDL_204
2.0.5 SDL_205
2.0.6 SDL_206
2.0.7 SDL_207
2.0.8 SDL_208
2.0.9 SDL_209
2.0.10 SDL_2010
2.0.12 SDL_2012
2.0.14 SDL_2014
2.0.16 SDL_2016
2.0.18 SDL_2018
2.0.20 SDL_2020
2.0.22 SDL_2022
2.24.X SDL_2_24
2.26.X SDL_2_26

Warning

SDL 2.0.1 on Windows had a bug preventing SDL_GetPrefPath from creating a folder when it doesn't exist. It's fine to compile with SDL_201, but make sure to ship your app with 2.0.2 or later on Windows and verify that the linked version is 2.0.2 or later with SDL_GetVersion. Alternatively, compile with SDL_202 on Windows but SDL_201 on other platforms, thereby guaranteeing an error on Windows if the user doesn't have SDL 2.0.2 or higher.

Note

Starting from SDL 2.0.10, all even-numbered versions are releases, while all odd-numbered versions are pre-releases—which are not for general use and therefore not supported by BindBC-SDL.

SDL_image versions

Version Version identifier Public API changed
2.0.0 SDL_Image_200
2.0.1 SDL_Image_201
2.0.2 SDL_Image_202 ✔️
2.0.3 SDL_Image_203
2.0.4 SDL_Image_204
2.0.5 SDL_Image_205
2.6.X SDL_Image_2_6 ✔️

Note

Starting from SDL_image 2.6.X, all even-numbered versions are releases, while all odd-numbered versions are pre-releases—which are not for general use and therefore not supported by BindBC-SDL.

SDL_mixer versions

Version Version identifier Public API changed
2.0.0 SDL_Mixer_200
2.0.1 SDL_Mixer_201 ✔️
2.0.2 SDL_Mixer_202 ✔️
2.0.4 SDL_Mixer_204 ✔️
2.6.X SDL_Mixer_2_6 ✔️

Note

Starting from SDL_mixer 2.0.4, all even-numbered versions are releases, while all odd-numbered versions are pre-releases—which are not for general use and therefore not supported by BindBC-SDL.

SDL_net versions

Version Version identifier Public API changed
2.0.0 SDL_Net_200
2.0.1 SDL_Net_201
2.2.X SDL_Net_2_2

Note

Starting from SDL_net 2.2.X, all even-numbered versions are releases, while all odd-numbered versions are pre-releases—which are not for general use and therefore not supported by BindBC-SDL.

SDL_ttf versions

Version Version identifier Public API changed
2.0.12 SDL_TTF_2012
2.0.13 SDL_TTF_2013
2.0.14 SDL_TTF_2014 ✔️
2.0.15 SDL_TTF_2015
2.0.18 SDL_TTF_2018 ✔️
2.20.X SDL_TTF_2_20 ✔️

Note

Starting from SDL_ttf 2.0.18, all even-numbered versions are releases, while all odd-numbered versions are pre-releases—which are not for general use and therefore not supported by BindBC-SDL.

Special platforms

Some platforms do not have pre-defined versions in D, meaning that BindBC-SDL has to use custom version identifiers for them. If you intend to compile for any of these platforms, please add the corresponding version identifier(s) in your dub versions, or supply them in -version to your compiler.

Note

If you're building on Wayland and you have X11 support disabled in SDL, please add version SDL_NoX11.

Platform Version identifier
DirectFB DirectFB
KMS/DRM KMSDRM
Mir-server Mir
Operating System/2 OS2
Vivante Vivante
Microsoft Game Development Kit WinGDK
Windows Runtime WinRT

Windows: Loading from outside the DLL search path

The SDL libraries load some dependency DLLs dynamically in the same way that BindBC can load libraries dynamically. There is an issue that can arise on Windows when putting some of the SDL DLLs in a subdirectory of your executable directory. That is, if your executable is (for example) in the directory myapp, and the SDL DLLs are in the directory myapp\libs, you may find that one or more of the SDL libraries fails to load. To solve or prevent this problem, take the following steps:

First, make sure the non-system libraries on which the SDL libraries depend (such as zlib.dll) are in the same directory as the SDL libraries.

Second, you'll want to add your subdirectory path to the Windows DLL search path. This can be accomplished via the function setCustomLoaderSearchPath in BindBC-Loader. For more details, see "Default Windows search path" from the BindBC-Loader readme.

The idea is that you call the function with the path to all of the DLLs before calling any of the load functions, then call it again with a null argument to reset to the default search path. Bear in mind that some of the SDL_* libraries load their dependencies lazily. For example, SDL_image will only load libpng when IMG_Init is called with the IMG_INIT_PNG flag, so the second call should not occur until after the libraries have been initialised.

import bindbc.loader,
	bindbc.sdl;

// Assume the DLLs are stored in the "dlls" subdirectory
version(Windows) setCustomLoaderSearchPath("dlls");

if(loadSDL() < sdlSupport) { /* handle error */ }
if(loadSDLImage() < sdlImageSupport) { /* handle error */ }

// Give SDL_image a chance to load libpng and libjpeg
auto flags = IMG_INIT_PNG | IMG_INIT_JPEG;
if(IMG_Init(flags) != flags) { /* handle error */ }

// Now reset the default loader search path
version(Windows) setCustomLoaderSearchPath(null);

It is not strictly necessary to reset the default search path, but doing so can avoid unexpected issues for any other dependencies that may be loaded dynamically by an application's process.

setCustomLoaderSearchPath is only implemented on Windows. I know of no way to programmatically manipulate the default search path on Linux or other platforms (please correct me if I'm wrong). Then again, this issue doesn't generally arise on those platforms.