1 {{+bindTo:partials.standard_nacl_article}}
3 <section id=
"release-notes">
4 <span id=
"sdk-release-notes"></span><h1 id=
"release-notes"><span id=
"sdk-release-notes"></span>Release Notes
</h1>
5 <p>The dates in the following release notes denote when Chrome and the NaCl SDK
6 reached canary status. The stable release is typically
6 weeks later.
</p>
7 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-43-03-april-2015">Chrome/Pepper
43 (
03 April
2015)
</h2>
8 <h3 id=
"pnacl">PNaCl
</h3>
10 <li>The C11/C++
11 <code>acquire
</code>,
<code>release
</code>, and
<code>acq_rel
</code> memory orders are now
11 generated by default. The in-browser Chrome
42 translator supports them, the
12 SDK can therefore generate them.
</li>
13 <li>Fix a
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=460432">code generation bug on ARM
</a> when dealing with
16-bit load/store and
14 <code>bswap
</code> which led to a NaCl validation failure.
</li>
15 <li>PNaCl is now based on LLVM
3.6. If you are using GDB to debug PNaCl
16 <a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#debugging-pnacl-pexes"><em>BC files with debug metadata in the browser
</em></a>,
17 remember that debug info from SDK version
<code>X
</code> is only compatible with the
18 PNaCl translator in chrome version
<code>X
</code>. The bitcode debug metadata format
19 changed from LLVM
3.5 to
3.6. If you need to debug an app built with SDK
20 version
<code>X
</code> running in Chrome version
<code>Y
</code> (with
<code>X != Y
</code>), it is still
21 possible to do so. Simply translate the pexe to a nexe using the
22 <a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#debugging-pexes-via-nexes"><em>offline pnacl-translate tool from SDK version X
</em></a> instead of using the translator in the
23 browser (version
<code>Y
</code>).
</li>
24 <li>PNaCl
’s support for use of libstdc++
4.6 as the C++ standard library is
25 deprecated and will be removed in the next release. PNaCl has used libc++
26 (which is much more up-to-date, currently based on LLVM
3.6) as the default
29 <h3 id=
"pepper">Pepper
</h3>
30 <ul class=
"small-gap">
31 <li>UDP Socket Multicast API in development preview (PPB_UDP_SOCKET
1.2).
</li>
32 <li>Hardware Video Encoder API in development preview (PPB_VIDEO_ENCODER
0.1).
</li>
34 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-42-20-february-2015">Chrome/Pepper
42 (
20 February
2015)
</h2>
36 <ul class=
"small-gap">
37 <li>The SDK now contains experimental versions of
<code>i686-nacl-clang
</code>,
38 <code>x86_64-nacl-clang
</code>, and
<code>arm-nacl-clang
</code> as well as the
<code>clang++
</code>
39 equivalents. These toolchains are based on the same LLVM version as PNaCl, but
40 can be used to generate NaCl
<code>.nexe
</code> files instead of translating a
41 <code>.pexe
</code> locally or using the GCC toolchain.
</li>
43 <h3 id=
"nacl">NaCl
</h3>
44 <ul class=
"small-gap">
45 <li>The x86 NaCl validators accept instructions from the FMA3 extensions, as well
46 as AVX2 instructions (except
<code>VGATHER
</code>).
</li>
48 <h3 id=
"id1">PNaCl
</h3>
49 <ul class=
"small-gap">
50 <li>PNaCl supports C11/C++
11 memory orders
<code>acquire
</code>,
<code>release
</code>, and
51 <code>acq_rel
</code>. It used to upgrade all accesses to
<code>seq_cst
</code>. It still upgrades
52 <code>consume
</code> to
<code>acquire
</code> (no compiler currently implements
<code>consume
</code>), and
53 <code>relaxed
</code> to
<code>seq_cst
</code> (to conservatively avoid platform differences due
54 to out-of-thin-air problems). This is currently disabled by default in the SDK
55 so that the in-browser translator installed on users
’ machines has time to
56 gain this support. Developers can turn it on by passing the
57 <code>-pnacl-memory-order-seq-cst-only=false
</code> flag to
<code>opt
</code>.
</li>
58 <li>PNaCl handles nested struct type expansion, which allows it to better support
59 non-C languages such as Rust.
</li>
60 <li>PNaCl breaks up many integer operations over
64-bits into individual
64-bit
61 operations. This is often encountered when using large consecutive bitfields.
</li>
63 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-41-09-january-2015">Chrome/Pepper
41 (
09 January
2015)
</h2>
64 <h3 id=
"id2">NaCl
</h3>
65 <ul class=
"small-gap">
66 <li>The x86 NaCl validators accept instructions from the AVX1 extensions.
</li>
68 <h3 id=
"id3">PNaCl
</h3>
69 <ul class=
"small-gap">
70 <li>PNaCl is now based on LLVM
3.5.
</li>
72 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-40-november-07-2014">Chrome/Pepper
40 (November
07 2014)
</h2>
73 <ul class=
"small-gap">
74 <li><a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/cpp/classpp_1_1_video_decoder.html">VideoDecoder
</a> is now
75 stable, see the SDK example in
<code>pepper_canary/examples/api/video_decode
</code>.
</li>
77 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-39-26-september-2014">Chrome/Pepper
39 (
26 September
2014)
</h2>
78 <h3 id=
"id4">NaCl
</h3>
79 <ul class=
"small-gap">
80 <li>This release contains a fix for CVE-
2015-
0565:
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"https://code.google.com/p/nativeclient/issues/detail?id=3944">disable the x86 CLFLUSH
81 instruction due to rowhammer problem
</a>.
</li>
83 <h3 id=
"id5">Pepper
</h3>
84 <ul class=
"small-gap">
85 <li>Support for
<code>DEBUG_ONLY:dev://postmessage
</code> has been removed in favor of
86 <a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#devcycle-debugging"><em>other more useful debugging approaches
</em></a>.
</li>
87 <li><code>postMessageAndAwaitResponse
</code> is now stable and allows JavaScript to
88 <a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/cpp/classpp_1_1_message_handler">communicate synchronously
</a> with PNaCl
91 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-38-15-august-2014">Chrome/Pepper
38 (
15 August
2014)
</h2>
92 <h3 id=
"id6">PNaCl
</h3>
93 <ul class=
"small-gap">
94 <li>Compilation speed improvements due to validation caching of the translator and
96 <li>Performance improvement of SIMD vector shuffle.
</li>
98 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-37-20-june-2014">Chrome/Pepper
37 (
20 June
2014)
</h2>
99 <h3 id=
"id7">PNaCl
</h3>
100 <ul class=
"small-gap">
101 <li>2–
10% translation time improvement.
</li>
102 <li>Improved vector load/store and shuffle performance.
</li>
104 <h3 id=
"id8">Pepper
</h3>
105 <ul class=
"small-gap">
106 <li>Media Streams Input support.
</li>
107 <li>Compositor API.
</li>
108 <li>Hardware Decode API in development preview.
</li>
109 <li>Sync API in development preview.
</li>
111 <h3 id=
"id9">SDK
</h3>
112 <ul class=
"small-gap">
113 <li>Demo of a
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/io2014.html#io2014"><em>full development environment in the browser
</em></a>.
</li>
115 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-36-09-may-2014">Chrome/Pepper
36 (
09 May
2014)
</h2>
116 <h3 id=
"id10">PNaCl
</h3>
117 <ul class=
"small-gap">
118 <li>Support
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://clang.llvm.org/docs/LanguageExtensions.html#vectors-and-extended-vectors">LLVM vectors
</a>
119 and
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Vector-Extensions.html">GCC vectors
</a> for SIMD
120 vectors through
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/reference/pnacl-c-cpp-language-support.html#portable-simd-vectors"><em>Portable SIMD Vectors
</em></a>. Note that this is still an early release,
121 and performance is expected to become acceptable for version
37 of
122 Chrome. More SIMD instructions will be added in later releases.
</li>
124 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-35-31-mar-2014">Chrome/Pepper
35 (
31 Mar
2014)
</h2>
125 <h3 id=
"id11">PNaCl
</h3>
126 <ul class=
"small-gap">
127 <li>Upgraded LLVM to version
3.4.
</li>
128 <li>Translation now uses dynamic load balancing, making translation time faster.
</li>
129 <li>Unstable pexes (i.e. non-finalized) with debug information can be loaded by
130 Chrome, simplifying debugging with PNaCl. See
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#debugging-pnacl-pexes"><em>Debugging PNaCl pexes
</em></a></li>
132 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-34-20-feb-2014">Chrome/Pepper
34 (
20 Feb
2014)
</h2>
133 <h3 id=
"id12">Pepper
</h3>
134 <ul class=
"small-gap">
135 <li>Filesystems can now be passed from JavaScript to NaCl. The resulting
136 <code>pp::Var
</code> will contain a
<code>pp::Resource
</code> that can be given to the
137 <code>pp::FileSystem
</code> constructor.
</li>
138 <li>New Audio and Video input APIs have been added as dev interfaces. See
139 <a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_dev/cpp/classpp_1_1_media_stream_audio_track">pp::MediaStreamAudioTrack
</a> and
140 <a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_dev/cpp/classpp_1_1_media_stream_video_track">pp::MediaStreamVideoTrack
</a> for
143 <h3 id=
"id13">PNaCl
</h3>
144 <ul class=
"small-gap">
145 <li>Parallel translation: at least
1.7x faster, even with older pexes.
</li>
146 <li>Intelligent abbreviations in the bitcode:
20% reduction in binary size using
147 the
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/building.html#pnacl-compress"><em>pnacl-compress
</em></a> tool.
</li>
149 <h2 id=
"chrome-pepper-33-16-dec-2013">Chrome/Pepper
33 (
16 Dec
2013)
</h2>
150 <h3 id=
"portable-native-client">Portable Native Client
</h3>
151 <ul class=
"small-gap">
152 <li>PNaCl
’s default C++ standard library is now LLVM
’s own libc++, based on
153 LLVM
3.3. This library now supports optional
<code>setjmp
</code>/
<code>longjmp
</code> exception
154 handling (see
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/native-client-discuss/0spfg6O04FM">announcement
</a>
157 <h3 id=
"id14">SDK
</h3>
158 <ul class=
"small-gap">
159 <li>The
<code>nacl_io
</code> library now includes a FUSE mount.
</li>
160 <li>In the SDK examples,
<code>common.js
</code> now loads the Release version of the
161 nexes/pexes that are built (by default).
</li>
162 <li>“<code>make debug
</code>” and
“<code>make run
</code>” have been fixed on Mac.
</li>
164 <h2 id=
"pnacl-enabled-by-default-in-chrome-31-12-nov-2013">PNaCl enabled by default in Chrome
31 (
12 Nov
2013)
</h2>
165 <ul class=
"small-gap">
166 <li>Portable Native Client (PNaCl) is enabled by default in Chrome
31. See
167 <a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/nacl-and-pnacl.html"><em>NaCl and PNaCl
</em></a> for details on the differences between
169 <li>The PNaCl ABI has changed from the preview release in Chrome
30.
170 Pexe modules built with the
<code>pepper_30
</code> bundle in the SDK must be recompiled
171 with the
<code>pepper_31
</code> bundle or later.
172 As a general rule, we always recommended building applications with the latest
173 stable bundle in the Native Client SDK.
174 The PNaCl ABI will remain stable starting with the release of Chrome
31.
</li>
175 <li><p class=
"first">Additional changes in the Chrome/Pepper
31 release:
</p>
176 <ul class=
"small-gap">
177 <li>Updates to the Pepper API, including socket and network support
</li>
178 <li>Improved socket support in the
<code>nacl_io
</code> library
</li>
182 <h2 id=
"pnacl-in-chrome-30-dev-channel-01-aug-2013">PNaCl in Chrome
30 Dev channel (
01 Aug
2013)
</h2>
183 <ul class=
"small-gap">
184 <li>Portable Native Client (PNaCl) is currently available for preview in Chrome
185 30 (currently in the Dev channel). Apps and sites built with PNaCl can run in
186 Chrome
30 without an explicit flag.
</li>
187 <li>See
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://www.chromium.org/nativeclient/pnacl/introduction-to-portable-native-client">Introduction to Portable Native Client
</a>
188 for information on developing for PNaCl. More documentation will be available
190 <li>Please note that the
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://www.chromium.org/nativeclient/pnacl/bitcode-abi">PNaCl bitcode ABI
</a> may still change
191 before the official public release; if you
’re developing a PNaCl-based
192 application, be sure to build your code with the latest version of the Native
194 <li>Update: PNaCl is not enabled by default in beta or stable versions of M30.
</li>
196 <h2 id=
"pnacl-15-may-2013">PNaCl (
15 May
2013)
</h2>
197 <ul class=
"small-gap">
198 <li>Portable Native Client (PNaCl) is currently available for developer preview
199 in Chrome
29 or higher.
</li>
200 <li>To produce a PNaCl executable (.pexe) file, you must use the pnacl toolchain
201 in the current
<code>pepper_canary
</code> bundle. Chrome
29 does not support .pexe
202 files produced by earlier versions of the pnacl toolchain (that is,
203 executables compiled with the
<code>pepper_28
</code> bundle or earlier).
</li>
204 <li>To run an application with a PNaCl module, you must launch Chrome
29 with the
205 <code>--enable-pnacl
</code> flag (for
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/apps">Chrome apps
</a>), or the
<code>--enable-nacl
</code>
206 flag (for other apps).
</li>
207 <li>When you launch Chrome with the
<code>--enable-pnacl
</code> flag, Chrome loads a PNaCl
208 translator in the background. Wait about a minute after you launch Chrome and
209 check
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"chrome://nacl">chrome://nacl
</a> to verify that the translator loaded.
</li>
210 <li>PNaCl translators are currently available for
32-bit x86,
64-bit x86, and ARM
212 <li>PNaCl applications must use the newlib C library (glibc and dynamic linking
213 are not supported yet).
</li>
214 <li>The intermediate representation (IR) format may change prior to the release
215 of PNaCl. If so, you will need to recompile your application with the pnacl
216 toolchain in a new SDK bundle.
</li>
218 <h2 id=
"pepper-27-12-april-2013">Pepper
27 (
12 April
2013)
</h2>
219 <p>The Pepper
27 bundle features a significant number of new libraries that have
220 been incorporated directly into the SDK.
</p>
221 <h3 id=
"libraries">Libraries
</h3>
222 <ul class=
"small-gap">
223 <li><p class=
"first">A number of libraries from the naclports project have been incorporated
224 directly into the Native Client SDK. These libraries include:
</p>
225 <ul class=
"small-gap">
226 <li>image encoding/decoding: jpeg, tiff, png, webp
</li>
227 <li>multimedia: openal, freealut, ogg, vorbis
</li>
228 <li>XML parsing: tinyxml, xml2
</li>
229 <li>miscellaneous: zlib (general purpose compression), freetype (font
230 rendering), lua (Lua interpreter)
</li>
232 <p>The libraries are located in
<code>ports/lib
</code>, and the header files are in
233 <code>ports/include
</code>.
</p>
235 <li>The
<code>httpfs
</code> filesystem in the nacl_io library now caches content in memory
236 by default; this improves performance considerably.
</li>
237 <li>For applications compiled with a glibc toolchain,
<code>dlopen()
</code> can now be
238 used to open shared libraries that are not specified in an application
’s
239 Native Client manifest (.nmf) file. This allows applications, for example, to
240 download a shared object and then use
<code>dlopen()
</code> to access the shared
241 object. The
<code>dlopen
</code> example has been modified to demonstrate this
242 functionality: reverse.cc is built into a shared object (.so) file, which is
243 downloaded and opened using an
<code>httpfs
</code> mount.
</li>
245 <h3 id=
"examples">Examples
</h3>
246 <ul class=
"small-gap">
247 <li>Each example now has a single
<code>index.html
</code> file, instead of multiple HTML
248 files corresponding to NaCl modules built using different toolchains and
249 configurations. By default, most examples are built using one toolchain
250 (newlib) and one configuration (Debug). If you build an example using
251 multiple toolchains or configurations, you can specify which version to run
252 in Chrome using the query parameters
<code>tc
</code> and
<code>config
</code>. For example,
253 assuming you are serving an example from the local server localhost:
5103, you
254 can run a version of the example built with the glibc toolchain in the
255 Release configuration by specifying the following URL in Chrome:
256 <code>http://localhost:
5103/index.html?tc=glibc
&config=Release
</code>. For additional
257 information about how different NaCl modules are loaded into
<code>index.html
</code>,
258 see the
<code>common.js
</code> file in each example.
</li>
260 <h3 id=
"build-tools-and-toolchains">Build tools and toolchains
</h3>
261 <ul class=
"small-gap">
262 <li>Common makefiles, including
<code>tools/common.mk
</code>, can now handle source files
263 located outside of an application
’s root directory. For example, a Makefile
264 for an application can specify a source file to compile such as
265 <code>../../some/other/place.cpp
</code>.
</li>
267 <h2 id=
"pepper-26-29-march-2013">Pepper
26 (
29 March
2013)
</h2>
268 <p>The Pepper
26 bundle includes a new HTTP filesystem type in the nacl_mounts
269 library (which has been renamed nacl_io), changes to the example Makefiles, a
270 simple new
3D example, and a threaded file IO example.
</p>
271 <h3 id=
"id15">Build tools and toolchains
</h3>
272 <ul class=
"small-gap">
273 <li><p class=
"first">Makefiles have been changed significantly:
</p>
274 <ul class=
"small-gap">
275 <li>Build commands are now specified in a number of common files
276 (
<code>tools/*.mk
</code>), which are included in the Makefiles in the examples.
</li>
277 <li>By default, make displays a simplified list of build steps (e.g.,
<code>CC
278 newlib/Debug/hello_world_x86_32.o
</code>) rather than the actual build commands.
279 To see the actual build commands, run
<code>make V=
1</code>.
</li>
280 <li>By default, most examples are built using one toolchain (newlib) and one
281 configuration (Debug). To build an example using a different toolchain or
282 configuration, run
<code>make
</code> with the parameters
<code>TOOLCHAIN=
<x
></code> or
283 <code>CONFIG=
<y
></code>. You can also run make
<code>all_versions
</code> to build an example
284 with all toolchains.
</li>
287 <li>Header files have been moved out of the toolchains. All toolchains now share
288 the same set of header files as host builds. Previously host and NaCl builds
289 used different headers, which could cause build problems.
</li>
291 <h3 id=
"id16">Libraries
</h3>
292 <ul class=
"small-gap">
293 <li>The nacl_mounts library has been renamed
<strong>nacl_io
</strong>, and has been expanded
294 with a new type of mount, httpfs, which can be used to read URLs via HTTP.
295 For details see
<code>include/nacl_io/nacl_io.h
</code>, as well as the
296 <code>hello_nacl_io
</code> example.
</li>
298 <h3 id=
"id17">Examples
</h3>
299 <ul class=
"small-gap">
300 <li>A new example,
<strong>hello_world_instance3d
</strong>, has been added to demonstrate a
301 simplified
3D app.
</li>
302 <li>The
<strong>file_io
</strong> example has been rewritten to do all file operations on a
303 thread. The example demonstrates how to use the MessageLoop API and blocking
304 callbacks on a thread.
</li>
306 <h3 id=
"general">General
</h3>
307 <ul class=
"small-gap">
308 <li>Old bundles (
<code>pepper_20
</code> and earlier) have been removed from the Native
309 Client SDK Manifest, and will no longer be updated by the
<code>naclsdk
</code>
312 <h2 id=
"pepper-25-21-december-2012">Pepper
25 (
21 December
2012)
</h2>
313 <p>The Pepper
25 bundle features an ARM toolchain to build Native Client modules
314 for ARM devices, two new Pepper APIs (including the MessageLoop API, which lets
315 you make Pepper calls on background threads), two new libraries (nacl_mounts,
316 which provides a virtual file system that you can use with standard C file
317 operations, and ppapi_main, which lets you implement a Native Client module
318 using a simple ppapi_main function), and two new examples that demonstrate how
319 to use the nacl_mounts and ppapi_main libraries.
</p>
320 <h3 id=
"id18">Build tools and toolchains
</h3>
321 <ul class=
"small-gap">
322 <li><p class=
"first">The SDK includes a new toolchain to build Native Client executables (.nexe
323 files) for
<strong>ARM devices
</strong>.
</p>
324 <ul class=
"small-gap">
325 <li>Currently the ARM toolchain can only be used to compile modules that use
326 the
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/dynamic-loading.html#c-libraries"><em>newlib C library
</em></a>. You cannot use the ARM toolchain
327 to compile modules that use the glibc library.
</li>
328 <li>The ARM toolchain is in the directory
329 <code>pepper_25/toolchain/
<host
>_arm_newlib
</code>. The bin subdirectory contains
330 the compiler (
<code>arm-nacl-gcc
</code>), the linker (
<code>arm-nacl-g++
</code>), and the
331 other tools in the toolchain.
</li>
332 <li>Take a look at the
<code>hello_world
</code> example to see how to use the ARM
333 toolchain. Go to
<code>examples/hello_world
</code> and run
<code>make
</code>. When the build
334 finishes, the newlib/Debug and newlib/Release subdirectories will contain
335 .nexe files for the x86-
32, x86-
64, and ARM target architecutes, and a
336 Native Client manifest (.nmf file) that references those three .nexe files.
</li>
339 <li>The simple web server included in the SDK,
<code>httpd.py
</code>, has been moved from
340 the
<code>examples/
</code> directory to the
<code>tools/
</code> directory. On Windows, you can
341 run
<code>httpd.cmd
</code> (in the
<code>examples/
</code> directory) to start the server.
</li>
343 <h3 id=
"ppapi">PPAPI
</h3>
344 <p>Pepper
25 includes two new APIs:
</p>
345 <ul class=
"small-gap">
346 <li>The
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/c/struct_p_p_b___console__1__0">Console API
</a> lets your
347 module log messages to the JavaScript console in the Chrome browser.
</li>
348 <li>The
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/cpp/classpp_1_1_message_loop">MessageLoop
</a> API lets your
349 module make PPAPI calls on a background thread. Once you
’ve created a
350 message loop resource, attached it to a thread, and run it, you can post work
351 to the thread, including completion callbacks for asynchronous operations.
352 For a C++ example of how to use the MessageLoop API, see
353 <code>pepper_25/include/ppapi/utility/threading/simple_thread.h
</code>. Note that you
354 cannot make asynchronous PPAPI calls on a background thread without creating
355 and using a message loop.
</li>
357 <h3 id=
"id19">Libraries
</h3>
358 <p>The SDK includes two new libraries:
</p>
359 <ul class=
"small-gap">
360 <li><p class=
"first">The
<strong>nacl_mounts
</strong> library provides a virtual file system that your module
361 can
“mount
” in a given directory tree. The file system can be one of several
363 <ul class=
"small-gap">
364 <li>“memfs
” is an in-memory file system,
</li>
365 <li>“dev
” is a file system with various utility nodes (e.g.,
<code>/dev/null
</code>,
366 <code>/dev/console[
0-
3]
</code>,
<code>/dev/tty
</code>), and
</li>
367 <li>“html5fs
” is a persistent file system.
</li>
369 <p>Once you
’ve mounted a file system in your module, you can use standard C
370 library file operations: fopen, fread, fwrite, fseek, and fclose. How those
371 operations are performed depends on the type of file system (e.g., for
372 html5fs, the operations are performed using the Pepper FileIO API). For a
373 list of the types of file systems you can mount, see
374 include/nacl_mounts/nacl_mounts.h. For an example of how to use nacl_mounts,
375 see examples/hello_nacl_mounts. Note that html5fs is subject to the same
376 constraints as persistent
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/coding/file-io.html#devguide-coding-fileio"><em>local file IO
</em></a> in
377 Chrome (for example, prior to using an html5fs file system, you must
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"enabling_file_access">enable
378 local file IO
</a>).
</p>
380 <li>The
<strong>ppapi_main
</strong> library simplifies the creation of a NaCl module by
381 providing a familiar C programming environment. With this library, your
382 module can have a simple entry point called ppapi_main(), which is similar to
383 the standard C main() function, complete with argc and argv[] parameters.
384 Your module can also use standard C functions such as printf(), fopen(), and
385 fwrite(). For details see include/ppapi_main/ppapi_main.h. For an example of
386 how to use ppapi_main, see examples/hello_world_stdio.
</li>
388 <p>Header files for the new libraries are in the
<code>include/
</code> directory, source
389 files are in the
<code>src/
</code> directory, and compiled libraries are in the
<code>lib/
</code>
391 <h3 id=
"id20">Examples
</h3>
392 <ul class=
"small-gap">
393 <li><p class=
"first">The SDK includes two new examples:
</p>
394 <ul class=
"small-gap">
395 <li><strong>hello_nacl_mounts
</strong> illustrates how to use standard C library file
396 operations in a Native Client module through the use of the nacl_mounts
398 <li><strong>hello_world_stdio
</strong> illustrates how to implement a Native Client module
399 with a ppapi_main() function, and how to write to STDOUT and STDERR in a
400 module, through the use of the nacl_mounts and ppapi_main libraries. This
401 example makes it easy for new users to get started with Native Client by
402 letting them start making changes in a familiar C environment.
</li>
405 <li><p class=
"first">With a few exceptions, the Makefile for each example now builds the following
406 versions of each example:
</p>
407 <ul class=
"small-gap">
408 <li>glibc toolchain:
32-bit and
64-bit .nexes for the x86 target architecture
</li>
409 <li>newlib toolchain:
32-bit and
64-bit .nexes for the x86 target architecture,
410 and ARM .nexe for the ARM architecture
</li>
411 <li>pnacl toolchain: .pexe (which is subsequently tranlsated to .nexes for the
412 x86-
32, x86-
64, and ARM architectures)
</li>
413 <li>hosted toolchain: .so or .dll (to be executed as a Pepper plug-in in
417 <li>Additionally, each version is built in both a Debug and a Release
419 <li>The Makefile for each example includes two new targets:
<code>make RUN
</code> and
420 <code>make LAUNCH
</code>. These targets, which are interchangeable, launch a local
421 server and an instance of Chrome to run an example. When the instance of
422 Chrome is closed, the local server is shut down as well.
</li>
423 <li>The hello_world_stdio example includes a simplified Makefile that only lists
424 source dependencies, and invokes the build rules in a separate file
427 <h2 id=
"pepper-24-5-december-2012">Pepper
24 (
5 December
2012)
</h2>
428 <p>The Pepper
24 bundle features a new, experimental toolchain called PNaCl (short
429 for
“Portable Native Client
”), a new library (pthreads-win32) for the Windows
430 SDK, and an expanded list of attributes for Pepper
3D contexts that lets
431 applications specify a GPU preference for low power or performance.
</p>
432 <h3 id=
"id21">Build tools and toolchains
</h3>
433 <ul class=
"small-gap">
434 <li>The SDK includes a new, experimental toolchain called
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://nativeclient.googlecode.com/svn/data/site/pnacl.pdf">PNaCl
</a> (pronounced
435 “pinnacle
”). The PNaCl toolchain produces architecture-independent executable
436 files (.pexe files). Chrome doesn
’t yet support .pexe files directly, but if
437 you want to experiment with this early preview of PNaCl, the toolchain
438 includes a tool to translate .pexe files into architecture-specific .nexe
439 files. Take a look at the
<code>hello_world
</code> example to see how to build a .pexe
440 file and translate it into multiple .nexe files. Note that PNaCl is currently
441 restricted to the newlib C standard library – if your application uses glibc,
442 you can
’t build it with PNaCl.
</li>
443 <li>The
<code>create_nmf.py
</code> script uses ELF headers (rather than file names) to
444 determine the architecture of .nexe files. That means you can change the
445 names of your .nexe files and
<code>create_nmf.py
</code> will still be able to
446 generate the appropriate Native Client manifest file for your application.
</li>
448 <h3 id=
"id23">Examples
</h3>
449 <ul class=
"small-gap">
450 <li>The SDK examples now build with four toolchains: the glibc and newlib
451 toolchains, the experimental PNaCl toolchain, and the hosted toolchain on
452 your development machine. Within each toolchain build, each example also
453 builds both a debug and a release version.
</li>
454 <li>The example Makefiles use dependency (.d) files to enable incremental builds.
</li>
455 <li>The pong example has been cleaned up and modified to run more smoothly. The
456 drawing function is now set up as the Flush() callback, which allows
2D
457 drawing to occur as quickly as possible.
</li>
459 <h3 id=
"id24">PPAPI
</h3>
460 <ul class=
"small-gap">
461 <li>When creating a
3D rendering context, the
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/c/group___enums#ga7df48e1c55f6401beea2a1b9c07967e8">attribute list
</a>
462 for the context can specify whether to prefer low power or performance for
463 the GPU. Contexts with a low power preference may be created on an integrated
464 GPU; contexts with a performance preference may be created on a discrete GPU.
</li>
466 <h3 id=
"windows-sdk">Windows SDK
</h3>
467 <ul class=
"small-gap">
468 <li>The Windows SDK includes the pthreads-win32 library to assist in porting from
469 win32 code. You can use this library when developing your module as a Pepper
470 plug-in (.dll). See pepper_24/include/win/pthread.h and
471 pepper_24/src/pthread/README for additional information.
</li>
472 <li>The update utility naclsdk.bat works when it is run from a path with spaces.
</li>
474 <h2 id=
"pepper-23-15-october-2012">Pepper
23 (
15 October
2012)
</h2>
475 <p>The Pepper
23 bundle includes support for the nacl-gdb debugger on Mac and
476 32-bit Windows, resources to enable hosted development on Linux, and changes to
477 make the SDK examples compliant with version
2 of the Chrome Web Store manifest
479 <h3 id=
"tools">Tools
</h3>
480 <ul class=
"small-gap">
481 <li>The
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#using-gdb"><em>nacl-gdb debugger
</em></a> now works on all systems (Mac,
482 Windows, and Linux).
</li>
483 <li>The output of the SDK update utility has been simplified. When you run the
484 command
<code>naclsdk list
</code>, the utility displays one line for each available
485 bundle, annotated with an
“<code>I
</code>” if the bundle is already installed on your
486 system, and a
“<code>*
</code>” if the bundle has an update available. To see full
487 information about a bundle, use the command
<code>naclsdk info
<bundle
></code> (for
488 example,
<code>naclsdk info pepper_28
</code>).
</li>
490 <h3 id=
"linux-sdk">Linux SDK
</h3>
491 <ul class=
"small-gap">
492 <li><p class=
"first">Developers using the Linux SDK now have resources, including pre-built
493 libraries and example Makefiles, that make it easier to
<strong>build a module as a
494 Pepper plugin
</strong> (sometimes called a
“trusted
” or
“in-process
” plugin) using
495 the native C/C++ compiler on their development system. In essence this makes
496 developing a Native Client module a two-step process:
</p>
497 <ol class=
"arabic simple">
498 <li>Build the module into a shared library (.so file) using your system
’s
499 C/C++ compiler. Test and debug the .so file using the tools in your normal
500 development environment.
</li>
501 <li>Build the module into a .nexe file using the compiler from one of the
502 Native Client toolchains in the SDK (nacl-gcc or nacl-g++). Test and debug
503 the .nexe file using nacl-gdb.
</li>
505 <p>This two step development process has many benefits—in particular, you can
506 use the compilers, debuggers, profilers, and other tools that you
’re already
507 familiar with. But there are a few potential issues to keep in mind:
</p>
508 <ul class=
"small-gap">
509 <li>Chrome uses different threading models for trusted plugins and Native
511 <li>Certain operations such as platform-specific library calls and system calls
512 may succeed during trusted development, but fail in Native Client.
</li>
514 <p>Here are the resources you can use to build your module into a Pepper plugin:
</p>
515 <ul class=
"small-gap">
516 <li>header files are in
<code>pepper_23/include
</code></li>
517 <li>source files are in
<code>pepper_23/src
</code></li>
518 <li>pre-built libraries are in
<code>pepper_23/lib
</code></li>
520 <p>You can now build and run most of the examples in the SDK as Pepper plugins.
</p>
521 <ul class=
"small-gap">
522 <li>Look at the example Makefiles or run
<code>make
</code> in the example directories to
523 see the commands and flags used to build modules as Pepper plugins.
</li>
524 <li>Run
<code>make LAUNCH
</code> in the example directories to see how to use the
525 <code>--register-pepper-plugins
</code> argument to load a Pepper plugin in Chrome.
526 Note that you must set the
<code>CHROME_PATH
</code> environment variable and start a
527 <a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/running.html#web-server"><em>local server
</em></a> prior to running this command.
</li>
531 <h3 id=
"id25">Examples
</h3>
532 <ul class=
"small-gap">
533 <li>On Linux and Windows systems, most of the examples now build with three
534 toolchains: the Native Client glibc and newlib toolchains, and the native
535 toolchain on the host system. Modules built with the native toolchain on the
536 host system can only run as Pepper plugins.
</li>
537 <li>All examples in the SDK now comply with version
2 of the Chrome Web Store
538 <a class=
"reference external" href=
"/extensions/manifest">manifest file format
</a>. By default,
539 applications that use version
2 of the manifest file format apply a strict
540 <a class=
"reference external" href=
"/extensions/contentSecurityPolicy">content security policy
</a>, which
541 includes a restriction against inline JavaScript. This restriction prohibits
542 both inline
<code><script
></code> blocks and inline event handlers (e.g.,
<code><button
543 onclick=
"...
"></code>). See
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/extensions/manifestVersion">Manifest Version
</a> for
544 a list of changes between version
1 and version
2 of the manifest file
545 format, and a support schedule for applications that use version
1.
</li>
547 <h3 id=
"id26">PPAPI
</h3>
548 <ul class=
"small-gap">
549 <li><a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/c/group___enums#ga21b811ac0484a214a8751aa3e1c959d9">PP_InputEvent_Modifier
</a>
550 has two new enum values (_ISLEFT and _ISRIGHT).
</li>
551 <li>The memory leak in the
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/c/struct_p_p_b___web_socket__1__0">WebSocket
</a> API has
554 <h2 id=
"pepper-22-22-august-2012">Pepper
22 (
22 August
2012)
</h2>
555 <p>The Pepper
22 bundle includes a
<strong>command-line debugger
</strong>, resources to enable
556 <strong>hosted development on Windows
</strong>, and changes to the example Makefiles (each
557 example now builds both a debug and a release version).
</p>
558 <h3 id=
"id27">Tools
</h3>
559 <ul class=
"small-gap">
560 <li>The SDK now includes a
<strong>command-line debugger
</strong> that you can use to debug
561 Native Client modules. See
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/debugging.html#devcycle-debugging"><em>Debugging with nacl-gdb
</em></a> for instructions on how to use this debugger. For now,
562 nacl-gdb only works on
64-bit Windows,
64-bit Linux, and
32-bit Linux
563 systems. Support for Mac and
32-bit Windows systems will be added soon.
</li>
565 <h3 id=
"id28">Windows SDK
</h3>
566 <ul class=
"small-gap">
567 <li><p class=
"first">Developers using the Windows SDK can now
<strong>build a module as a Pepper
568 plugin
</strong> (sometimes called a
“trusted
” or
“in-process
” plugin) using the
569 native C/C++ compiler on their development system. In essence this makes
570 developing a Native Client module a two-step process:
</p>
571 <ol class=
"arabic simple">
572 <li>Build the module into a DLL using your system
’s C/C++ compiler. Test and
573 debug the DLL using the tools in your normal development environment.
</li>
574 <li>Build the module into a .nexe using the compiler from one of the Native
575 Client toolchains in the SDK (nacl-gcc or nacl-g++). Test and debug the
576 .nexe using nacl-gdb.
</li>
578 <p>This two step development process has many benefits—in particular, you can
579 use the compilers, debuggers, profilers, and other tools that you
’re already
580 familiar with. But there are a few potential issues to keep in mind:
</p>
581 <ul class=
"small-gap">
582 <li>Some libraries that are commonly used with Native Client may not build
583 easily on Windows.
</li>
584 <li>You may need to put in extra effort to get source code to compile with
585 multiple compilers, e.g., Microsoft Visual Studio and GCC.
</li>
586 <li>Chrome uses different threading models for trusted plugins and Native
588 <li>Certain operations such as platform-specific library calls and system calls
589 may succeed during trusted development, but fail in Native Client.
</li>
591 <p>Here are the resources you can use to build your module into a DLL:
</p>
592 <ul class=
"small-gap">
593 <li>header files are in
<code>pepper_22\include
</code></li>
594 <li>source files are in
<code>pepper_22\src
</code></li>
595 <li>pre-built libraries are in
<code>pepper_22\lib
</code></li>
598 <li>A Visual Studio add-in will be available in the near future with
599 configurations that include platforms for both Pepper plugins and NaCl
603 <strong>Note:
</strong> It
’s also possible to build a module as a trusted plugin on Mac and
604 Linux systems, but doing so requires more work because the SDK does not yet
605 include the above resources (library source files and pre-built libraries)
606 for Mac and Linux systems. To build and debug a trusted plugin on Mac and
607 Linux systems, you need to
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://dev.chromium.org/developers/how-tos/get-the-code">get the Chromium code
</a> and then follow
608 the
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://www.chromium.org/nativeclient/how-tos/debugging-documentation/debugging-a-trusted-plugin/trusted-debugging-on-mac">Mac instructions
</a>
609 or
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"http://www.chromium.org/nativeclient/how-tos/debugging-documentation/debugging-a-trusted-plugin/debugging-a-trusted-plugin-on-linux">Linux instructions
</a>.
610 In the future, the SDK will include resources for hosted development on Mac
611 and Linux as well as Windows.
613 <h3 id=
"id29">Examples
</h3>
614 <ul class=
"small-gap">
615 <li>Each example in the SDK now builds both a debug and a release version. As
616 before, most examples also build newlib and glibc versions, which means that
617 there are now four versions for each example. Take a look at the Makefiles in
618 the examples to see the compiler flags that are used for debug and release
619 versions. For a description of those flags, see
<a class=
"reference internal" href=
"/native-client/devguide/devcycle/building.html#compile-flags"><em>Compile flags for
620 different development scenarios
</em></a>.
</li>
621 <li>Comments have been added to common.js, which is used in all the examples. The
622 JavaScript in common.js inserts an
<embed
> element that loads the NaCl module
623 in each example
’s web page, attaches event listeners to monitor the loading
624 of the module, and implements handleMessage() to respond to messages sent
625 from the NaCl module to the JavaScript side of the application
</li>
627 <h3 id=
"id30">PPAPI
</h3>
628 <ul class=
"small-gap">
629 <li>The
<code>CompletionCallbackFactory
</code> class template now takes a thread traits
630 class as its second parameter. For details see the
<a class=
"reference external" href=
"/native-client/pepper_stable/cpp/classpp_1_1_completion_callback_factory#details">CompletionCallbackFactory
631 class template reference
</a>.
</li>
635 {{/partials.standard_nacl_article}}