Legion-Engine is a data oriented C++17 game engine built to make optimal use of modern hardware.
The Legion-Core is built on an async compute minded design to take care of the logic and an ECS to take care of the data. This allows the engine and editor to utilize all the power they can find and to be extremely modular.
- Post-processing stack
- Particle system
- PBR
- Imgui
- Automatic exposure
- Modular rendering pipeline
- Custom shader support & shader standard library
- shader precompiler lgnspre
- GLTF & OBJ support
- Convex quick hull generation
- Diviner physics engine
- Data oriented
- Thread-safe
- "Archetype" support
- Thread-safe eventbus
- Unique & Persistent events
- easy extensebility
- Spatial audio
- Non-spatial audio
- Dopplereffect
- MP3 & WAV support
- Stereo->Mono conversion
- OpenCL frontend with support for buffers & textures
- High level abstractions
- Virtual filesystem
- Serialization & Scenes(Alpha)
- Job scheduling
- Pipeline scheduling for multiple main threads
- Modular Processchains
- Custom logging support
- Custom input system
- Extended standard library
- Modular Architecture
- Math extensions to GLM
The engine is by default build using Visual Studio 19 using the Clang++ compiler and C++17. For linux we don't provide any default IDE support. However, you can still compile the engine using Clang++.
You can either build the engine yourself using Premake5 or the already provided Visual Studio 19 solution. As of now Legion does not support compilation to DLL. Copy the include folder to your project and link the libraries you compiled.
Legion already defines the C++ entry point in it's own source code. So in order to start making a program define LEGION_ENTRY
and include any of modules main include files.
eg:
#define LEGION_ENTRY
#include <core/core.hpp>
Since the entry point is already defined you need to define a different function to start working with Legion. Legion will already start itself, but it won't have any modules attached. In order to attach modules you need to define the reportModules
function like so:
#include "mymodule.hpp"
using namespace legion;
void LEGION_CCONV reportModules(Engine* engine)
{
engine->reportModule<MyModule>();
engine->reportModule<app::ApplicationModule>();
}
Of course in order to link your own modules you need to make one:
#include <core/core.hpp>
#include "mysystem.hpp"
class TestModule : public legion::Module
{
public:
virtual void setup() override
{
reportComponentType<my_component>(); // Report a component type
reportSystem<MySystem>(); // Report a system
}
};
Legion engine uses an ECS for all of it's core functionality. So for your own project you need to define your own systems and components:
#include <core/core.hpp>
struct my_component { int myVal; };
class MySystem final : public legion::System<MySystem>
{
virtual void setup()
{
createProcess<&MySystem::update>("Update");
}
void update(legion::time::span deltaTime)
{
// Do stuff every frame on the update thread
static auto myQuery = createQuery<my_component, position>();
mQuery.queryEntities();
for(auto entity : myQuery)
{
// Runs for every entity that has both my_component and a position component.
}
}
};
For more information about the engine usage see the docs.
(All libraries can already be found in the deps folder)
- OpenAL Soft
- GLM
- OpenGL
- GLFW
- OpenCL
- TinyOBJ
- STB image
- Cereal
- Spdlog
- Minimp3
- Legion shader preprocessor (lgnspre)
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
- Glyn Leine - Technical director, core architecture, ECS, scheduling, import pipeline, and renderer - [Website] [Github] [LinkedIn]
- Raphael Baier - Filesystem, build pipeline, GPGPU compute, input system, meta nonsense - [Website] [Github] [LinkedIn]
- Raphael Priatama - Physics - [Website] [Github] [LinkedIn]
- Jelle Vrieze - Audio/3D audio - [Website] [Github] [LinkedIn]
- Rowan Ramsey - Serialization - [Website] [Github] [LinkedIn]
See also the list of contributors who participated in this project.
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details