glUseProgram(3) Installs a program object as part of current rendering state

C SPECIFICATION

void glUseProgram(GLuint program);

PARAMETERS

program

Specifies the handle of the program object whose executables are to be used as part of current rendering state.

DESCRIPTION

glUseProgram installs the program object specified by program as part of current rendering state. One or more executables are created in a program object by successfully attaching shader objects to it with glAttachShader(), successfully compiling the shader objects with glCompileShader(), and successfully linking the program object with glLinkProgram().

A program object will contain an executable that will run on the vertex processor if it contains one or more shader objects of type GL_VERTEX_SHADER that have been successfully compiled and linked. A program object will contain an executable that will run on the geometry processor if it contains one or more shader objects of type GL_GEOMETRY_SHADER that have been successfully compiled and linked. Similarly, a program object will contain an executable that will run on the fragment processor if it contains one or more shader objects of type GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER that have been successfully compiled and linked.

While a program object is in use, applications are free to modify attached shader objects, compile attached shader objects, attach additional shader objects, and detach or delete shader objects. None of these operations will affect the executables that are part of the current state. However, relinking the program object that is currently in use will install the program object as part of the current rendering state if the link operation was successful (see glLinkProgram() ). If the program object currently in use is relinked unsuccessfully, its link status will be set to GL_FALSE, but the executables and associated state will remain part of the current state until a subsequent call to glUseProgram removes it from use. After it is removed from use, it cannot be made part of current state until it has been successfully relinked.

If program is zero, then the current rendering state refers to an invalid program object and the results of shader execution are undefined. However, this is not an error.

If program does not contain shader objects of type GL_FRAGMENT_SHADER, an executable will be installed on the vertex, and possibly geometry processors, but the results of fragment shader execution will be undefined.

NOTES

Like buffer and texture objects, the name space for program objects may be shared across a set of contexts, as long as the server sides of the contexts share the same address space. If the name space is shared across contexts, any attached objects and the data associated with those attached objects are shared as well.

Applications are responsible for providing the synchronization across API calls when objects are accessed from different execution threads.

ERRORS

GL_INVALID_VALUE is generated if program is neither 0 nor a value generated by OpenGL.

GL_INVALID_OPERATION is generated if program is not a program object.

GL_INVALID_OPERATION is generated if program could not be made part of current state.

GL_INVALID_OPERATION is generated if transform feedback mode is active.

ASSOCIATED GETS

glGet() with the argument GL_CURRENT_PROGRAM

glGetActiveAttrib() with a valid program object and the index of an active attribute variable

glGetActiveUniform() with a valid program object and the index of an active uniform variable

glGetAttachedShaders() with a valid program object

glGetAttribLocation() with a valid program object and the name of an attribute variable

glGetProgram() with a valid program object and the parameter to be queried

glGetProgramInfoLog() with a valid program object

glGetUniform() with a valid program object and the location of a uniform variable

glGetUniformLocation() with a valid program object and the name of a uniform variable

glIsProgram()

COPYRIGHT

Copyright © 2003-2005 3Dlabs Inc. Ltd. This material may be distributed subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Open Publication License, v 1.0, 8 June 1999. m[blue]http://opencontent.org/openpub/m[].