Vulkan Memory Allocator
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Configuration

Please check "CONFIGURATION SECTION" in the code to find macros that you can define before each include of this file or change directly in this file to provide your own implementation of basic facilities like assert, min() and max() functions, mutex, atomic etc.

For example, define VMA_ASSERT(expr) before including the library to provide custom implementation of the assertion, compatible with your project. By default it is defined to standard C assert(expr) in _DEBUG configuration and empty otherwise.

Similarly, you can define VMA_LEAK_LOG_FORMAT macro to enable printing of leaked (unfreed) allocations, including their names and other parameters. Example:

#define VMA_LEAK_LOG_FORMAT(format, ...) do { \
printf((format), __VA_ARGS__); \
printf("\n"); \
} while(false)

Pointers to Vulkan functions

There are multiple ways to import pointers to Vulkan functions in the library. In the simplest case you don't need to do anything. If the compilation or linking of your program or the initialization of the VmaAllocator doesn't work for you, you can try to reconfigure it.

First, the allocator tries to fetch pointers to Vulkan functions linked statically, like this:

m_VulkanFunctions.vkAllocateMemory = (PFN_vkAllocateMemory)vkAllocateMemory;

If you want to disable this feature, set configuration macro: #define VMA_STATIC_VULKAN_FUNCTIONS 0.

Second, you can provide the pointers yourself by setting member VmaAllocatorCreateInfo::pVulkanFunctions. You can fetch them e.g. using functions vkGetInstanceProcAddr and vkGetDeviceProcAddr or by using a helper library like volk.

Third, VMA tries to fetch remaining pointers that are still null by calling vkGetInstanceProcAddr and vkGetDeviceProcAddr on its own. You need to only fill in VmaVulkanFunctions::vkGetInstanceProcAddr and VmaVulkanFunctions::vkGetDeviceProcAddr. Other pointers will be fetched automatically. If you want to disable this feature, set configuration macro: #define VMA_DYNAMIC_VULKAN_FUNCTIONS 0.

Finally, all the function pointers required by the library (considering selected Vulkan version and enabled extensions) are checked with VMA_ASSERT if they are not null.

Custom host memory allocator

If you use custom allocator for CPU memory rather than default operator new and delete from C++, you can make this library using your allocator as well by filling optional member VmaAllocatorCreateInfo::pAllocationCallbacks. These functions will be passed to Vulkan, as well as used by the library itself to make any CPU-side allocations.

Device memory allocation callbacks

The library makes calls to vkAllocateMemory() and vkFreeMemory() internally. You can setup callbacks to be informed about these calls, e.g. for the purpose of gathering some statistics. To do it, fill optional member VmaAllocatorCreateInfo::pDeviceMemoryCallbacks.

Device heap memory limit

When device memory of certain heap runs out of free space, new allocations may fail (returning error code) or they may succeed, silently pushing some existing_ memory blocks from GPU VRAM to system RAM (which degrades performance). This behavior is implementation-dependent - it depends on GPU vendor and graphics driver.

On AMD cards it can be controlled while creating Vulkan device object by using VK_AMD_memory_overallocation_behavior extension, if available.

Alternatively, if you want to test how your program behaves with limited amount of Vulkan device memory available without switching your graphics card to one that really has smaller VRAM, you can use a feature of this library intended for this purpose. To do it, fill optional member VmaAllocatorCreateInfo::pHeapSizeLimit.