Note
|
Note
The most useful parts of this document are the Introduction, Building The Spec, and notes on installing Software Dependencies. |
This repository contains the source and tool chain used to generate the formal OpenCL API, OpenCL C, OpenCL Extensions, OpenCL SPIR-V Environment, OpenCL C Specifications, as well as the OpenCL 2.2 Reference Pages and documentation for the C for OpenCL kernel language.
This file describes the repository structure, tools, and build instructions needed.
The OpenCL specifications are maintained by members of the Khronos Group’s OpenCL Working Group, in the OpenCL-Docs Github repository. The documents are all in Asciidoctor format.
Contributions via pull requests on Github are welcome. Pull requests must be provided under the same Creative Commons license as the specification source. You’ll be prompted with a one-time “click-through” Contributor’s License Agreement (CLA) dialog as part of submitting your pull request or other contribution to GitHub.
We intend to maintain a linear history on the GitHub master
branch.
File |
Description |
|
This file |
|
GNU Makefile used to build HTML and PDF spec targets |
|
Support files for asciidoctor build, HTML CSS / Javascript, etc. |
|
KaTeX math renderer for HTML outputs |
|
Main source file for the OpenCL API Specification |
|
Individual sections of the API Specification |
|
Main source file for the OpenCL C Specification |
|
Individual sections of the C Specification |
|
Main source file for the OpenCL C++ Specification |
|
Individual sections of the C++ Specification |
|
Main source file for the OpenCL SPIR-V Environment Specification |
|
Individual sections of the Environment Specification |
|
Main source file for the OpenCL Extensions Specification |
|
Individual sections of the Extensions Specification |
|
Main source file for the C++ for OpenCL Documentation |
|
Individual sections of the C++ for OpenCL Documentation |
|
Shared images, used by all specs |
|
Static reference page sources |
If you have installed all required toolchain components, you should be able to build both HTML and PDF outputs for all specifications by:
$ make
Other Makefile targets are available for building the different outputs for each Specification:
Target |
Builds |
html |
HTML outputs for all specifications |
PDF outputs for all specifications |
|
api |
HTML and PDF outputs for API Specification |
apihtml |
HTML outputs for API Specification |
apipdf |
PDF outputs for API Specification |
c |
HTML and PDF outputs for C Specification |
chtml |
HTML outputs for C Specification |
cpdf |
PDF outputs for C Specification |
cxx |
HTML and PDF outputs for C++ Specification |
cxxhtml |
HTML outputs for C++ Specification |
cxxpdf |
PDF outputs for C++ Specification |
env |
HTML and PDF outputs for SPIR-V Environment Specification |
envhtml |
HTML outputs for Environment Specification |
envpdf |
PDF outputs for Environment Specification |
ext |
HTML and PDF outputs for Extensions Specification |
exthtml |
HTML outputs for Extensions Specification |
extpdf |
PDF outputs for Extensions Specification |
cxx4opencl |
HTML and PDF outputs for C++ for OpenCL Documentation |
cxx4openclhtml |
HTML outputs for C++ for OpenCL Documentation |
cxx4openclpdf |
PDF outputs for C++ for OpenCL Documentation |
manhtmlpages |
HTML outputs for Reference Pages |
The specification targets are generated in out/html/
for HTML targets,
and out/pdf/
for PDF targets.
The reference page target is generated in out/man/html/
.
If a different output directory is desired, set the Makefile variable
OUTDIR on the command line. For example,
make OUTDIR=/tmp apihtml
will create /tmp/html/OpenCL_API.html
.
These targets generate a variety of output documents in the directory
specified by the Makefile variable $(OUTDIR)
(by default, out
).
Once you have the basic build working, an appropriate parallelization option to make, such as
make -j 6
may significantly speed up building multiple specs. The asciidoctor HTML build is very fast, even for the whole Specification, but PDF builds may take several minutes.
Most of the reference pages are extracted from the OpenCL API and OpenCL
C Specifications, although some are static.
While anyone can generate reference page sets for themselves, Khronos
publishes them via the master
branch of the
OpenCL Registry.
When the OpenCL Specification Editor is updating the published reference pages, it is easiest to have local repository clones of this repository (OpenCL-Docs) as well as OpenCL-Registry. Update the pages in the local registry clone via
make -j 6 OUTDIR=path-to-registry-repo/sdk/2.2/docs manhtmlpages
This creates the HTML output pages under sdk/2.2/docs/man/html
, and copies
the KaTeX package to sdk/2.2/docs/katex
.
To publish, commit those changes to the registry repository and push it to
github.
We use a modified version of the Asciidoctor 'colony' theme. This theme is
maintained internally to Khronos and the resulting CSS is under
config/khronos.css
.
Where possible, equations should be written using straight asciidoc markup using the eq role. This covers many common equations and is faster than the alternatives.
For more complex equations, such as multi-case statements, matrices, and complex fractions, equations should be written using the latexmath: inline and block macros. The contents of the latexmath: blocks should be LaTeX math notation. LaTeX math markup delimiters are now inserted by the asciidoctor toolchain.
LaTeX math is passed through unmodified to all HTML output forms, which is
subsequently rendered with the KaTeX engine when the html is loaded.
A local copy of the KaTeX release is kept in katex/
and copied to the HTML
output directory during spec generation.
Math is processed into SVGs via asciidoctor-mathematical
for PDF output.
The following caveats apply:
-
The special characters
<
,>
, and&
can currently be used only in [latexmath] block macros, not in latexmath:[] inline macros. Instead use\lt
,\leq
,\gt
, and\geq
for<
,⇐
,>
, and>=
respectively.&
is an alignment construct for multiline equations, and should only appear in block macros anyway. -
AMSmath environments (e.g. \begin{equation*}, {align*}, etc.) cannot be used in KaTeX at present, and have been replaced with constructs supported by KaTeX such as {aligned}.
-
Arbitrary LaTeX constructs cannot be used. KaTeX and asciidoctor-mathematical are only equation renderers, not full LaTeX engines. Imbedding LaTeX like \Large or \hbox{\tt\small VK\_FOO} may not work in any of the backends, and should be avoided.
See the “Vulkan Documentation and Extensions” document in the Khronos Vulkan Registry for more details of supported LaTeX math constructs in our toolchain.
In asciidoctor, sections can have anchors (labels) applied with the following syntax:
[[spirv-il]] == SPIR-V Intermediate language
In general the anchor should immediately precede the chapter or section title and should use the form '[[chapter-section-label]]'.
Cross-references to those anchors can then be generated with, for example,
See the <<spirv-il>> section for discussion of the SPIR-V intermediate language.
You can also add anchors on arbitrary paragraphs, using a similar naming scheme.
This section describes the software components used by the OpenCL spec toolchain.
Before building the OpenCL specs, you must install the following tools:
-
GNU make (make version: 4.0.8-1; older versions probably OK)
-
Python 3 (python, version: 3.4.2)
-
Ruby (ruby, version: 2.3.3)
-
The Ruby development package (ruby-dev) may also be required in some environments.
-
-
Git command-line client (git, version: 2.1.4). The build can progress without a git client, but branch/commit information will be omitted from the build. Any version supporting the following operations should work:
-
git symbolic-ref --short HEAD
-
git log -1 --format="%H"
-
-
Ghostscript (ghostscript, version: 9.10). This is for the PDF build, and it can still progress without it. Ghostscript is used to optimize the size of the PDF, so will be a lot smaller if it is included.
-
ttf Fonts. These are needed the PDF build for latexmath rendering. See Font Dependencies for asciidoctor-mathematical.
The following Ruby Gems and platform package dependencies must also be installed. This process is described in more detail for individual platforms and environment managers below. Please read the remainder of this document (other than platform-specific parts you don’t use) completely before trying to install.
-
Asciidoctor (asciidoctor, version: 1.5.8)
-
Coderay (coderay, version: 1.1.1)
-
ttfunk (ttfunk, version: 1.5.1)
-
Asciidoctor PDF (asciidoctor-pdf, version: 1.5.0)
-
Asciidoctor Mathematical (asciidoctor-mathematical, version 0.2.2)
-
Dependencies for asciidoctor-mathematical (There are a lot of these!)
-
KaTeX distribution (version 0.7.0 from https://github.com/Khan/KaTeX . This is cached under
katex/
, and need not be installed from github.
Only the asciidoctor
and coderay
gems are needed if you don’t intend to
build PDF versions of the spec and supporting documents.
Note
|
Note
While it’s easier to install just the toolchain components for HTML builds,
people submitting MRs with substantial changes to the Specifications are
responsible for verifying that their branches build both |
Platform-specific toolchain instructions follow:
-
-
Ubuntu / Windows 10. The Windows 10 Ubuntu subsystem is recommended over MinGW and Cygwin for Windows builds, if possible, due to speed, similarity to the Linux toolchain, and the required packages being more likely to be up-to-date.
-
MinGW (PDF builds not tested)
-
Most of the dependencies on Linux packages are light enough that it’s possible to build the spec natively in Windows, but it means bypassing the makefile and calling functions directly. This might be solved in future. For now, there are three options for Windows users: Ubuntu / Windows 10, MinGW, or Cygwin.
When using the “Ubuntu Subsystem” for Windows 10, most dependencies can be installed via apt-get:
sudo apt-get -qq -y install build-essential python3 git cmake bison flex \ libffi-dev libgmp-dev libxml2-dev libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev libcairo2-dev \ libpango1.0-dev fonts-lyx gtk-doc-tools ghostscript
The default ruby packages on Ubuntu are fairly out of date.
Ubuntu only provides ruby
and ruby2.0
- the latter is multiple revisions
behind the current stable branch, and would require wrangling to get the
makefile working with it.
Luckily, there are better options; either rvm or rbenv is recommended to install a more recent version.
Note
|
Note
|
Rbenv is a lighter-weight Ruby environment manager with less functionality than rvm. Its primary task is to manage different Ruby versions, while rvm has additional functionality such as managing “gemsets” that is irrelevant to our needs.
A complete installation script for the toolchain on Ubuntu for Windows, developed on an essentially out-of-the-box environment, follows. If you try this, don’t try to execute the entire thing at once. Do each step separately in case of errors we didn’t encounter.
# Install packages needed by `ruby_build` and by toolchain components. # See https://github.com/rbenv/ruby-build/wiki and # https://github.com/asciidoctor/asciidoctor-mathematical#dependencies sudo apt-get install autoconf bison build-essential libssl-dev \ libyaml-dev libreadline6-dev zlib1g-dev libncurses5-dev \ libffi-dev libgdbm3 libgdbm-dev cmake libgmp-dev libxml2 \ libxml2-dev flex pkg-config libglib2.0-dev \ libcairo-dev libpango1.0-dev libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev \ libpangocairo-1.0 # Install rbenv from https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv git clone https://github.com/rbenv/rbenv.git ~/.rbenv # Set path to shim layers in .bashrc echo 'export PATH="$HOME/.rbenv/bin:$PATH"' >> .bashrc ~/.rbenv/bin/rbenv init # Set .rbenv environment variables in .bashrc echo 'eval "$(rbenv init -)"' >> .bashrc # Restart your shell (e.g. open a new terminal window). Note that # you do not need to use the `-l` option, since the modifications # were made to .bashrc rather than .bash_profile. If successful, # `type rbenv` should print 'rbenv is a function' followed by code. # Install `ruby_build` plugin from https://github.com/rbenv/ruby-build git clone https://github.com/rbenv/ruby-build.git ~/.rbenv/plugins/ruby-build # Install Ruby 2.3.3 # This takes in excess of 20 min. to build! # https://github.com/rbenv/ruby-build/issues/1054#issuecomment-276934761 # suggests: # "You can speed up Ruby installs by avoiding generating ri/RDoc # documentation for them: # RUBY_CONFIGURE_OPTS=--disable-install-doc rbenv install 2.3.3 # We have not tried this. rbenv install 2.3.3 # Configure rbenv globally to always use Ruby 2.3.3. echo "2.3.3" > ~/.rbenv/version # Finally, install toolchain components. # asciidoctor-mathematical also takes in excess of 20 min. to build! # The same RUBY_CONFIGURE_OPTS advice above may apply here as well. gem install asciidoctor -v 1.5.8 gem install coderay -v 1.1.1 gem install ttfunk -v 1.5.1 gem install asciidoctor-pdf -v 1.5.0 MATHEMATICAL_SKIP_STRDUP=1 gem install asciidoctor-mathematical -v 0.2.2
Here are (sparser) instructions for using rvm to setup version 2.3.x:
gpg --keyserver hkp://keys.gnupg.net --recv-keys 409B6B1796C275462A1703113804BB82D39DC0E3 \curl -sSL https://get.rvm.io | bash -s stable --ruby source ~/.rvm/scripts/rvm rvm install ruby-2.3 rvm use ruby-2.3
Note
|
Windows 10 Bash will need to be launched with the "-l" option appended, so that it runs a login shell; otherwise RVM won’t function correctly on future launches. |
The Ubuntu 16.04.1 default Ruby install (version 2.3.1) seems to be
up-to-date enough to run all the required gems, but also needs the
ruby-dev
package installed through the package manager.
In addition, the library
/var/lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/mathematical-1.6.7/ext/mathematical/lib/liblasem.so
has to be copied or linked into a directory where the loader can find it.
This requirement appears to be due to a problem with the
asciidoctor-mathematical build process.
MinGW can be obtained here: http://www.mingw.org/
Once the installer has run its initial setup, following the
instructions on the website, you
should install the mingw-developer-tools
, mingw-base
and msys-base
packages.
The msys-base
package allows you to use a bash terminal from windows with
whatever is normally in your path on Windows, as well as the unix tools
installed by MinGW.
In the native Windows environment, you should also install the following native packages:
-
Python 3.x (https://www.python.org/downloads/)
-
Ruby 2.x (https://rubyinstaller.org/)
-
Git command-line client (https://git-scm.com/download)
Once this is setup, and the necessary Ruby Gems are
installed, launch the msys
bash shell, and navigate to the spec Makefile.
From there, you’ll need to set PYTHON=
to the location of your python
executable for version 3.x before your make command - but otherwise
everything other than pdf builds should just work.
Note
|
Building the PDF spec via this path has not yet been tested but may be possible - liblasem is the main issue and it looks like there is now a mingw32 build of it available. |
When installing Cygwin, you should install the following packages via
setup
:
// "curl" is only used to download fonts, can be done in another way autoconf bison cmake curl flex gcc-core gcc-g++ ghostscript git libbz2-devel libcairo-devel libcairo2 libffi-devel libgdk_pixbuf2.0-devel libgmp-devel libiconv libiconv-devel liblasem0.4-devel libpango1.0-devel libpango1.0_0 libxml2 libxml2-devel make python3 ruby ruby-devel
Note
|
Native versions of some of these packages are usable, but care should be taken for incompatibilities with various parts of cygwin - e.g. paths. Ruby in particular is unable to resolve Windows paths correctly via the native version. Python and Git for Windows can be used, though for Python you’ll need to set the path to it via the PYTHON environment variable, before calling make. |
When it comes to installing the mathematical ruby gem, there are two things that will require tweaking to get it working. Firstly, instead of:
MATHEMATICAL_SKIP_STRDUP=1 gem install asciidoctor-mathematical
You should use
MATHEMATICAL_USE_SYSTEM_LASEM=1 gem install asciidoctor-mathematical
The latter causes it to use the lasem package already installed, rather than trying to build a fresh one.
The mathematical gem also looks for "liblasem" rather than "liblasem0.4" as installed by the lasem0.4-devel package, so it is necessary to add a symlink to your /lib directory using:
ln -s /lib/liblasem-0.4.dll.a /lib/liblasem.dll.a
Ruby Gems are not installed to a location that is in your path normally.
Gems are installed to ~/bin/
- you should add this to your path before
calling make:
export PATH=~/bin:$PATH
Finally, you’ll need to manually install fonts for lasem via the following commands:
mkdir /usr/share/fonts/truetype cd /usr/share/fonts/truetype curl -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmex10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmmi10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmr10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmsy10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/esint10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/eufm10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/msam10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/msbm10.ttf
Mac OS X should work in the same way as for ubuntu by using the Homebrew
package manager, with the exception that you can simply install the ruby
package via brew
rather than using a ruby-specific version manager.
You’ll likely also need to install additional fonts for the PDF build via mathematical, which you can do with:
cd ~/Library/Fonts curl -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmex10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmmi10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmr10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/cmsy10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/esint10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/eufm10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/msam10.ttf \ -LO http://mirrors.ctan.org/fonts/cm/ps-type1/bakoma/ttf/msbm10.ttf
Then install the required Ruby Gems.
The instructions for the Ubuntu / Windows 10 installation are generally applicable to native Linux environments using Debian packages, such as Debian and Ubuntu, although the exact list of packages to install may differ.
Other distributions using different package managers, such as RPM (Fedora) and Yum (SuSE) will have different requirements.
Using rbenv
or rvm
is neccessary, since the system Ruby packages are
often well out of date.
Once the environment manager, Ruby, and ruby_build
have been installed,
install the required Ruby Gems.
The following ruby gems can be installed directly via the gem install
command, once the platform is set up:
gem install asciidoctor -v 1.5.8 gem install coderay -v 1.1.1 gem install ttfunk -v 1.5.1 # Required only for pdf builds gem install asciidoctor-pdf -v 1.5.0 MATHEMATICAL_SKIP_STRDUP=1 gem install asciidoctor-mathematical -v 0.2.2
The specification Asciidoctor source files are licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License; see https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Additional source files used to build the specification are under a mixture of Apache 2.0 and MIT licenses. See the LICENSE file for details.
The official Specification HTML and PDF output documents are posted in the OpenCL Registry. These Specifications are placed under the proprietary Khronos specification copyright and license.
OpenCL and the OpenCL logo are trademarks of Apple Inc. used by permission by Khronos.
-
2020-03-13 - Updated package versions to match Travis build.
-
2019-06-20 - Add directions for publishing OpenCL 2.2 reference pages, generated from the spec sources in this repository, in the OpenCL-Registry repository.
-
2018-02-15 - Retarget document from Vulkan repository for OpenCL asciidoctor spec builds.