QOpenGLContext Class▲
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Header: QOpenGLContext
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Since: Qt 5.0
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CMake:
find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Gui)
target_link_libraries(mytarget PRIVATE Qt6::Gui)
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qmake: QT += gui
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Inherits: QObject
Detailed Description▲
QOpenGLContext represents the OpenGL state of an underlying OpenGL context. To set up a context, set its screen and format such that they match those of the surface or surfaces with which the context is meant to be used, if necessary make it share resources with other contexts with setShareContext(), and finally call create(). Use the return value or isValid() to check if the context was successfully initialized.
A context can be made current against a given surface by calling makeCurrent(). When OpenGL rendering is done, call swapBuffers() to swap the front and back buffers of the surface, so that the newly rendered content becomes visible. To be able to support certain platforms, QOpenGLContext requires that you call makeCurrent() again before starting rendering a new frame, after calling swapBuffers().
If the context is temporarily not needed, such as when the application is not rendering, it can be useful to delete it in order to free resources. You can connect to the aboutToBeDestroyed() signal to clean up any resources that have been allocated with different ownership from the QOpenGLContext itself.
Once a QOpenGLContext has been made current, you can render to it in a platform independent way by using Qt's OpenGL enablers such as QOpenGLFunctions, QOpenGLBuffer, QOpenGLShaderProgram, and QOpenGLFramebufferObject. It is also possible to use the platform's OpenGL API directly, without using the Qt enablers, although potentially at the cost of portability. The latter is necessary when wanting to use OpenGL 1.x or OpenGL ES 1.x.
For more information about the OpenGL API, refer to the official OpenGL documentation.
For an example of how to use QOpenGLContext see the OpenGL Window example.
Thread Affinity▲
QOpenGLContext can be moved to a different thread with moveToThread(). Do not call makeCurrent() from a different thread than the one to which the QOpenGLContext object belongs. A context can only be current in one thread and against one surface at a time, and a thread only has one context current at a time.
Context Resource Sharing▲
Resources such as textures and vertex buffer objects can be shared between contexts. Use setShareContext() before calling create() to specify that the contexts should share these resources. QOpenGLContext internally keeps track of a QOpenGLContextGroup object which can be accessed with shareGroup(), and which can be used to find all the contexts in a given share group. A share group consists of all contexts that have been successfully initialized and are sharing with an existing context in the share group. A non-sharing context has a share group consisting of a single context.
Default Framebuffer▲
On certain platforms, a framebuffer other than 0 might be the default frame buffer depending on the current surface. Instead of calling glBindFramebuffer(0), it is recommended that you use glBindFramebuffer(ctx->defaultFramebufferObject()), to ensure that your application is portable between different platforms. However, if you use QOpenGLFunctions::glBindFramebuffer(), this is done automatically for you.
See Also▲
Member Type Documentation▲
[since 5.3] enum QOpenGLContext::OpenGLModuleType▲
This enum defines the type of the underlying OpenGL implementation.
Constant |
Value |
Description |
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QOpenGLContext::LibGL |
0 |
OpenGL |
QOpenGLContext::LibGLES |
1 |
OpenGL ES 2.0 or higher |
This enum was introduced or modified in Qt 5.3.
Member Function Documentation▲
[explicit] QOpenGLContext::QOpenGLContext(QObject *parent = nullptr)▲
Creates a new OpenGL context instance with parent object parent.
Before it can be used you need to set the proper format and call create().
See Also▲
See also create(), makeCurrent()
[virtual] QOpenGLContext::~QOpenGLContext()▲
Destroys the QOpenGLContext object.
If this is the current context for the thread, doneCurrent() is also called.
void QOpenGLContext::aboutToBeDestroyed()▲
This signal is emitted before the underlying native OpenGL context is destroyed, such that users may clean up OpenGL resources that might otherwise be left dangling in the case of shared OpenGL contexts.
If you wish to make the context current in order to do clean-up, make sure to only connect to the signal using a direct connection.
[static] bool QOpenGLContext::areSharing(QOpenGLContext *first, QOpenGLContext *second)▲
Returns true if the first and second contexts are sharing OpenGL resources.
bool QOpenGLContext::create()▲
Attempts to create the OpenGL context with the current configuration.
The current configuration includes the format, the share context, and the screen.
If the OpenGL implementation on your system does not support the requested version of OpenGL context, then QOpenGLContext will try to create the closest matching version. The actual created context properties can be queried using the QSurfaceFormat returned by the format() function. For example, if you request a context that supports OpenGL 4.3 Core profile but the driver and/or hardware only supports version 3.2 Core profile contexts then you will get a 3.2 Core profile context.
Returns true if the native context was successfully created and is ready to be used with makeCurrent(), swapBuffers(), etc.
If the context already exists, this function destroys the existing context first, and then creates a new one.
See Also▲
See also makeCurrent(), format()
[static] QOpenGLContext *QOpenGLContext::currentContext()▲
Returns the last context which called makeCurrent in the current thread, or nullptr, if no context is current.
GLuint QOpenGLContext::defaultFramebufferObject() const▲
Call this to get the default framebuffer object for the current surface.
On some platforms (for instance, iOS) the default framebuffer object depends on the surface being rendered to, and might be different from 0. Thus, instead of calling glBindFramebuffer(0), you should call glBindFramebuffer(ctx->defaultFramebufferObject()) if you want your application to work across different Qt platforms.
If you use the glBindFramebuffer() in QOpenGLFunctions you do not have to worry about this, as it automatically binds the current context's defaultFramebufferObject() when 0 is passed.
Widgets that render via framebuffer objects, like QOpenGLWidget and QQuickWidget, will override the value returned from this function when painting is active, because at that time the correct "default" framebuffer is the widget's associated backing framebuffer, not the platform-specific one belonging to the top-level window's surface. This ensures the expected behavior for this function and other classes relying on it (for example, QOpenGLFramebufferObject::bindDefault() or QOpenGLFramebufferObject::release()).
See Also▲
See also QOpenGLFramebufferObject
void QOpenGLContext::doneCurrent()▲
Convenience function for calling makeCurrent with a 0 surface.
This results in no context being current in the current thread.
See Also▲
See also makeCurrent(), currentContext()
QSet<QByteArray> QOpenGLContext::extensions() const▲
Returns the set of OpenGL extensions supported by this context.
The context or a sharing context must be current.
See Also▲
See also hasExtension()
QOpenGLExtraFunctions *QOpenGLContext::extraFunctions() const▲
Get the QOpenGLExtraFunctions instance for this context.
QOpenGLContext offers this as a convenient way to access QOpenGLExtraFunctions without having to manage it manually.
The context or a sharing context must be current.
The returned QOpenGLExtraFunctions instance is ready to be used and it does not need initializeOpenGLFunctions() to be called.
QOpenGLExtraFunctions contains functionality that is not guaranteed to be available at runtime. Runtime availability depends on the platform, graphics driver, and the OpenGL version requested by the application.
See Also▲
See also QOpenGLFunctions, QOpenGLExtraFunctions
QSurfaceFormat QOpenGLContext::format() const▲
Returns the format of the underlying platform context, if create() has been called.
Otherwise, returns the requested format.
The requested and the actual format may differ. Requesting a given OpenGL version does not mean the resulting context will target exactly the requested version. It is only guaranteed that the version/profile/options combination for the created context is compatible with the request, as long as the driver is able to provide such a context.
For example, requesting an OpenGL version 3.x core profile context may result in an OpenGL 4.x core profile context. Similarly, a request for OpenGL 2.1 may result in an OpenGL 3.0 context with deprecated functions enabled. Finally, depending on the driver, unsupported versions may result in either a context creation failure or in a context for the highest supported version.
Similar differences are possible in the buffer sizes, for example, the resulting context may have a larger depth buffer than requested. This is perfectly normal.
See Also▲
See also setFormat()
QOpenGLFunctions *QOpenGLContext::functions() const▲
Get the QOpenGLFunctions instance for this context.
QOpenGLContext offers this as a convenient way to access QOpenGLFunctions without having to manage it manually.
The context or a sharing context must be current.
The returned QOpenGLFunctions instance is ready to be used and it does not need initializeOpenGLFunctions() to be called.
QFunctionPointer QOpenGLContext::getProcAddress(const QByteArray &procName) const▲
Resolves the function pointer to an OpenGL extension function, identified by procName
Returns nullptr if no such function can be found.
[since 5.8] QFunctionPointer QOpenGLContext::getProcAddress(const char *procName) const▲
This is an overloaded function.
This function was introduced in Qt 5.8.
[static, since 5.5] QOpenGLContext *QOpenGLContext::globalShareContext()▲
This is useful if you need to upload OpenGL objects (buffers, textures, etc.) before creating or showing a QOpenGLWidget or QQuickWidget.
You must set the Qt::AA_ShareOpenGLContexts flag on QGuiApplication before creating the QGuiApplication object, otherwise Qt may not create a global shared context.
Do not attempt to make the context returned by this function current on any surface. Instead, you can create a new context which shares with the global one, and then make the new context current.
This function was introduced in Qt 5.5.
See Also▲
See also Qt::AA_ShareOpenGLContexts, setShareContext(), makeCurrent()
bool QOpenGLContext::hasExtension(const QByteArray &extension) const▲
Returns true if this OpenGL context supports the specified OpenGL extension, false otherwise.
The context or a sharing context must be current.
See Also▲
See also extensions()
[since 5.3] bool QOpenGLContext::isOpenGLES() const▲
Returns true if the context is an OpenGL ES context.
If the context has not yet been created, the result is based on the requested format set via setFormat().
This function was introduced in Qt 5.3.
See Also▲
bool QOpenGLContext::isValid() const▲
Returns if this context is valid, i.e. has been successfully created.
On some platforms the return value of false for a context that was successfully created previously indicates that the OpenGL context was lost.
The typical way to handle context loss scenarios in applications is to check via this function whenever makeCurrent() fails and returns false. If this function then returns false, recreate the underlying native OpenGL context by calling create(), call makeCurrent() again and then reinitialize all OpenGL resources.
On some platforms context loss situations is not something that can avoided. On others however, they may need to be opted-in to. This can be done by enabling ResetNotification in the QSurfaceFormat. This will lead to setting RESET_NOTIFICATION_STRATEGY_EXT to LOSE_CONTEXT_ON_RESET_EXT in the underlying native OpenGL context. QOpenGLContext will then monitor the status via glGetGraphicsResetStatusEXT() in every makeCurrent().
See Also▲
See also create()
bool QOpenGLContext::makeCurrent(QSurface *surface)▲
Makes the context current in the current thread, against the given surface. Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false. The latter may happen if the surface is not exposed, or the graphics hardware is not available due to e.g. the application being suspended.
If surface is nullptr this is equivalent to calling doneCurrent().
Avoid calling this function from a different thread than the one the QOpenGLContext instance lives in. If you wish to use QOpenGLContext from a different thread you should first make sure it's not current in the current thread, by calling doneCurrent() if necessary. Then call moveToThread(otherThread) before using it in the other thread.
By default Qt employs a check that enforces the above condition on the thread affinity. It is still possible to disable this check by setting the Qt::AA_DontCheckOpenGLContextThreadAffinity application attribute. Be sure to understand the consequences of using QObjects from outside the thread they live in, as explained in the QObject thread affinity documentation.
See Also▲
See also functions(), doneCurrent(), Qt::AA_DontCheckOpenGLContextThreadAffinity
QNativeInterface *QOpenGLContext::nativeInterface() const▲
Returns a native interface of the given type for the context.
This function provides access to platform specific functionality of QOpenGLContext, as defined in the QNativeInterface namespace:
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QNativeInterface::QCocoaGLContext: Native interface to an NSOpenGLContext on macOS.
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QNativeInterface::QEGLContext: Native interface to an EGL context.
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QNativeInterface::QGLXContext: Native interface to a GLX context.
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QNativeInterface::QWGLContext: Native interface to a WGL context on Windows.
If the requested interface is not available a nullptr is returned.
[static, since 5.3] QOpenGLContext::OpenGLModuleType QOpenGLContext::openGLModuleType()▲
Returns the underlying OpenGL implementation type.
On platforms where the OpenGL implementation is not dynamically loaded, the return value is determined during compile time and never changes.
A desktop OpenGL implementation may be capable of creating ES-compatible contexts too. Therefore in most cases it is more appropriate to check QSurfaceFormat::renderableType() or use the convenience function isOpenGLES().
This function requires that the QGuiApplication instance is already created.
This function was introduced in Qt 5.3.
QScreen *QOpenGLContext::screen() const▲
void QOpenGLContext::setFormat(const QSurfaceFormat &format)▲
Sets the format the OpenGL context should be compatible with. You need to call create() before it takes effect.
When the format is not explicitly set via this function, the format returned by QSurfaceFormat::defaultFormat() will be used. This means that when having multiple contexts, individual calls to this function can be replaced by one single call to QSurfaceFormat::setDefaultFormat() before creating the first context.
See Also▲
See also format()
void QOpenGLContext::setScreen(QScreen *screen)▲
Sets the screen the OpenGL context should be valid for. You need to call create() before it takes effect.
See Also▲
See also screen()
void QOpenGLContext::setShareContext(QOpenGLContext *shareContext)▲
See Also▲
See also shareContext()
QOpenGLContext *QOpenGLContext::shareContext() const▲
If the underlying platform was not able to support the requested sharing, this will return 0.
See Also▲
See also setShareContext()
QOpenGLContextGroup *QOpenGLContext::shareGroup() const▲
[static, since 5.5] bool QOpenGLContext::supportsThreadedOpenGL()▲
Returns true if the platform supports OpenGL rendering outside the main (gui) thread.
The value is controlled by the platform plugin in use and may also depend on the graphics drivers.
This function was introduced in Qt 5.5.
QSurface *QOpenGLContext::surface() const▲
Returns the surface the context has been made current with.
This is the surface passed as an argument to makeCurrent().
void QOpenGLContext::swapBuffers(QSurface *surface)▲
Swap the back and front buffers of surface.
Call this to finish a frame of OpenGL rendering, and make sure to call makeCurrent() again before issuing any further OpenGL commands, for example as part of a new frame.