Runtime Configuration

Skia supports the configuration of various aspects of its behavior at runtime, allowing developers to enable/disable features, or to experiment with numerical quantities without recompiling.

Enabling runtime configuration

In order to use a runtime-configurable variable in your source, simply:

#include "SkRTConf.h"

Declaring a runtime-configurable variable

At file scope, declare your variable like so:

SK_CONF_DECLARE( confType, varName, confName, defaultValue, description );

For example, to declare a boolean variable called c_printShaders that can be changed at runtime, you would do something like

SK_CONF_DECLARE( bool, c_printShaders, "gpu.printShaders", false, "print the
                 source code of any internally generated GPU shaders" ); 

It is safe to declare variables this way in header files; the variables will be declared as static, but since they are read-only-ish (they can be changed through a special mechanism; see below), this is safe.

Using a runtime-configurable variable

The variables created by SK_CONF_DECLARE can be used in normal C++ code as if they were regular contant variables. For example:

if (c_printShaders) {
    // actually print out the shaders
}

Changing a runtime-configurable variable after launch

If, for some reason, you want to change the value of a runtime-configurable variable after your program has started, you can do this with the SK_CONF_SET macro:

SK_CONF_SET( "gpu.printShaders", false )

Note that we‘re using the confName parameter to the declaration, not varName. This is because this configuration option may appear in multiple files (especially if you declared it in a header!), and we need to make sure to update all variables’ values, not just the one that's locally visible to the file you are currently in.

Changing a runtime-configurable variable before launch

This is the primary intended use of these variables. There are two ways that you can control the values of runtime-configurable variables at launch time: a skia.conf configuration file, or through the use of environment variables.

Using skia.conf

The skia.conf file is a simple line-based configuration file containing key-value pairs. It supports python-style # comments. For our example, we might see a configuration file that looks like:

gpu.printShaders      true
gpu.somethingElse     3.14159
matrix.invertProperly false    # math is hard
...

Note: boolean values may be set as 1, 0, true, or false. Other values will result in runtime errors.

If the skia library detects a skia.conf file at initialization time, it will parse it and override the default values of any declared configuration variables with the values found in the file.

Note: although it might appear that the configuration variables have a hierarchical naming scheme involving periods, that's just a convention I have adopted so that when all declared configuration variables are sorted alphabetically, they are roughly grouped by component.

Using environment variables

You can quickly override the value of one runtime-configurable variable using an environment variable equal to the variable's key with “skia.” prepended. So, for example, one might run:

prompt% skia.gpu.printShaders=true out/Debug/dm

or

prompt% export skia.gpu.printShaders=true
prompt% out/Debug/dm

On many shells, it is illegal to have a period in an environment variable name, so skia also supports underscores in place of the periods:

prompt% skia_gpu_printShaders=true out/Debug/dm

or

prompt% export skia_gpu_printShaders=true`
prompt% out/Debug/dm

Discovering all possible configuration variables

As this system becomes more widely used in skia, there may be hundreds of configuration variables. What are they all? What are their defaults? What do they do?

In order to find out, simply create a zero-length skia.conf file (on unix, touch skia.conf will do the trick). If skia detects a zero-length configuration file, it will overwrite it with a sorted list of all known configuration variables, their defaults, and their description strings. Each line will be commented out and have its value already equal to its default, so you can then edit this file to your liking.

To trigger this behavior, call the function skRTConfRegistry().possiblyDumpFile(); or simply use SkAutoGraphics ag;, which also validates your configuration and print out active non-default options.

Are these things enabled all the time?

In Debug builds, yes. Release builds disable runtime configuration by default, but it is still useful to be able to tweak certain algorithm parameters at runtime to do scripted performance studies. Therefore, a third build type, Release_Developer has been added. This build type has exactly the same build flags as Release, except it re-enables all runtime configuration behavior. Specifically:

prompt% ninja -C BUILDTYPE=Release_Developer

... wait a long time ...

prompt % skia_gpu_printShaders=true out/Release_Developer/dm

... enjoy ...

Known issues / limitations

Lines in ‘skia.conf’, including comments, are limited to 1024 characters. Runtime configuration variables of type char \* cannot currently have spaces in them. Runtime variables are only fully supported for int, unsigned int, float, double, bool, and char \*.

Questions? Bugs? Improvements?

Feel free to send feedback on this system to Greg Humphreys (humper@google.com)