You're not going to get lots of help from people on meta who don't understand the problem. To everyone else looking at this who isn't familiar with Vulkan, if you aren't working in graphics programming, let alone Vulkan, you literally can't comprehend how real and how big of a problem this is. MVCE's are not trivial in Vulkan, unlike OpenGL, the work required for code is dumped upfront, so you can't make a dinky 100 line program, you'd need at least a 1000 + lines.
The people in the Vulkan tags are smart. There's a lot of opportunity to ask a question without posting your entire code base, and it still be reproducible.
First, let’s reduce the context to what is absolutely necessary:
Use validation layers, always. There are other types of validation layers that are not enabled by default. The big one is VK_VALIDATION_FEATURE_ENABLE_SYNCHRONIZATION_VALIDATION_EXT
. This is a relatively new thing, and you'll have to enable this explicitly.
Use VkConfig with your Vulkan SDK to enable these layers if you don't want to do this programmatically.
Use RenderDoc to diagnose visualization issues before using SO. You can also use this to provide context to your question. Half the time RenderDoc provides enough information to solve things like vertex transform issues.
Remove synchronization issues as a possible avenue of bugs if you're sure that isn't it, and start looking at the same program. If removing synchronization fixes the issue, you've greatly reduced the possible locations where you could be having issues.
This will potentially cut down how often you need to go to SO to get a question answered, and help narrow down the issue.
Next we can separate Vulkan usages into several cases:
- Synchronization issues
- Shader issues
- Command issues.
- API issues.
You should be able to verify whether or not you're dealing with a synchronization related problem. Because of the way synchronization works in Vulkan, you should be able to only supply what is going on in your core rendering loop and or async compute loops, and not the setup code. This should be much less than the rest of the code base.
Shader issues can often allow one to only show only the shader(s) involved, which may be significantly less code than the entire code base. Even if the issue wasn't in the shader, what can happen is someone can verify that nothing is wrong with the shader, and that the issue must be somewhere else. To do this, you must have reasonable suspicion that the shader is actually the problem, and ideas why, otherwise, it's not very helpful to other readers.
Command submission issues might only require commands from a specific part of code. Using the normal MVCE but for your own sake, you should be able to isolate commands which are actually relevant to your problem, then, if the code base is too big, only show the command recording.
API issues are things like using the wrong flag, not understanding nomenclature, etc... Obviously if it isn't a code issue, you don't need code, but usually when you have API issues, it's with a specific object, and the only reason you know about this object is the validation layers. If you're sure you've exhausted your validation layer issues, you should be able to isolate only the code where this object exists, which should provide enough context for others to help. With those kind of API misuse issues, we often don't even have to run the code ourselves to know what is wrong with it.
vulkan
tag, with a few exceptions.