Walk the dependency graph of a glslify shader.
glslify-deps
is responsible for resolving your shader's dependencies and
applying their transforms before the actual source modification occurs. You may
notice some parallels here with browserify's
module-deps package.
While glslify-deps
is an "internal" package for glslify
, it may be useful
to use this package directly in specific cases, e.g. building a file tree
server-side but bundling the final shader on the client.
There is an asynchronous and a synchronous API:
var glslifyDeps = require('glslify-deps')
var glslifyDepsSync = require('glslify-deps/sync')
The asynchronous API is documented below. For every method in the asychronous
API, instead of a callback(err, result)
, the result is available as the return
value of the method.
Creates a fresh glslify-deps
instance. Accepts the following options:
cwd
: the current working directory to resolve relative file paths from.readFile
: pass in a custom function reading files.resolve
: pass in a custom function for resolving require calls. It has the same signature as glsl-resolve.files
: a filename/source object mapping of files to prepopulate the file cache with. Useful for overriding particular file paths manually, most notably the "entry" file.
Adds a new transform – should be used before calling depper.add
.
transform
may either be a string (which is resolved like a require
call),
or a function. More information on transforms can be found below.
Adds a new file to the dependency graph.
Adds a new inline file to the dependency graph, where source
is the GLSL
source to include and basedir
is the directory to pretend it's being
created in. A basedir
is required to properly resolve requires and transforms,
and defaults to process.cwd()
.
Emitted whenever a new file has been included in the dependency graph.
[
{
"id": 0,
"deps": { "glsl-random": 1 },
"file": "index.glsl",
"source": "precision mediump float;\n#pragma glslify: random = require(glsl-random)\n",
"entry": true
},
{
"id": 1,
"deps": {},
"file": "node_modules/glsl-random/index.glsl",
"source": "highp float random(vec2 co)\n{\n highp float a = 12.9898;\n highp float b = 78.233;\n highp float c = 43758.5453;\n highp float dt= dot(co.xy ,vec2(a,b));\n highp float sn= mod(dt,3.14);\n return fract(sin(sn) * c);\n}\n\n#pragma glslify: export(random)",
"entry": false
}
]
The transform API has changed since glslify 1.0 to make it more "vanilla".
With the asynchronous API, transforms have this signature:
module.exports = function(file, source, options, done) {
done(null, source.toUpperCase())
}
and using the synchronous API, transforms have this signature:
module.exports.sync = function(file, source, options) {
return source.toUpperCase()
}
For an example that is compatible with both the async and sync APIs, here's glslify-hex rewritten using the new API:
var through = require('through')
var regexLong = /#([a-f0-9]{2})([a-f0-9]{2})([a-f0-9]{2})([a-f0-9]{2})?/gi
var regexShort = /#([a-f0-9])([a-f0-9])([a-f0-9])([a-f0-9])?/gi
module.exports = transform
module.exports.sync = transform
function transform(filename, src, opts, done) {
src = src.replace(regexShort, function(whole, r, g, b, a) {
return !a
? '#' + r + r + g + g + b + b
: '#' + r + r + g + g + b + b + a + a
}).replace(regexLong, function(whole, r, g, b, a) {
r = makeFloat(parseInt(r, 16) / 255)
g = makeFloat(parseInt(g, 16) / 255)
b = makeFloat(parseInt(b, 16) / 255)
a = makeFloat(parseInt(a, 16) / 255)
return isNaN(a)
? 'vec3('+[r,g,b].join(',')+')'
: 'vec4('+[r,g,b,a].join(',')+')'
})
if (typeof done === 'function') done(null, src)
return src
}
function makeFloat(n) {
return String(n).indexOf('.') === -1
? n + '.'
: n
}
Transforms now support options specified in package.json
:
{
"glslify": {
"transform": [
"glslify-hex",
["glslify-optimize", { "mangle": true }]
]
}
}