baldurk 48f98ebdef Add shader subroutines (placeholder) and transform feedback
* The transform feedback is placed on the geometry shader tab the same as
  in D3D11. It doesn't merit its own whole tab and that seemed like the
  best place to put it (last processing stage before rasterization).
* To aid understanding, further stages are marked disabled if rasterizer
  discard is on, and if no geometry shader is bound the stage is renamed.
2015-01-18 12:06:39 +00:00
2014-10-12 22:15:42 +01:00

RenderDoc

Welcome to RenderDoc - a graphics debugger, currently available for D3D11 development on windows.

Quick Links:

API Support

Status Windows Linux
D3D11 Well supported, all features. ✔️ ✖️
OpenGL 3.2 core+ Work in progress, not complete. ✔️ ✔️ No native UI
OpenGL Pre-3.2 No immediate plans ✖️ ✖️
D3D10 No immediate plans ✖️ ✖️
D3D9 No immediate plans ✖️ ✖️
Mantle Planned for the future. ✖️ ✖️
D3D12 Planned for the future. ✖️ ✖️
Next Gen OpenGL Planned for the future. ✖️ ✖️
  • D3D11 has full feature support and is stable & tested. Feature Level 11 hardware is assumed - Radeon 4000/5000+, GeForce 400+, Intel Ivy Bridge.
  • OpenGL support has a few assumptions and limitations for now, check the OpenGL wiki page

Downloads

There are binary releases available, built from the release targets. If you just want to use the program and you ended up here, this is what you want :).

It's recommended that if you're new you start with the stable builds. Beta builds are available for those who want more regular updates with the latest features and fixes, but might run into some bugs as well. Nightly builds are available every day from master branch here if you need it.

License

RenderDoc is released under the MIT license, see LICENSE.md for full text as well as 3rd party library acknowledgements.

Building

Building RenderDoc is fairly straight forward. See COMPILE.md for more details.

Contributing & Development

I've added some notes on how to contribute, as well as where to get started looking through the code in COMPILE.md - check there for more details on how to set up to build renderdoc and where to start contributing to its development.

Languages
C++ 79.6%
C 16.6%
Python 2.5%
Objective-C++ 0.4%
HLSL 0.2%
Other 0.6%