Gluon Substrate is a tool that converts Java(FX) Client applications into native executables for desktop, mobile and embedded devices. It uses the GraalVM GraalVM native-image tool to compile the required Java bytecode into code that can be executed on the target system (e.g. your desktop, on iOS, on a Raspberry Pi).
Gluon Substrate deals with JavaFX resources (e.g. FXML, shader code,...) and with platform-specific Java and native code that is part of the JavaFX platform.
While Gluon Substrate has an API that allows direct access to it, it
is recommended to use the Maven plugin which simply requires some configuration in the pom.xml
file of your project. The plugin will then invoke the Substrate API
which in turn will use GraalVM native-image to compile the Java code,
and it will link the result with the required libraries and configuration
into a native executable.
There are a number of samples available that show you how to get started with Gluon Substrate. We recommend using your favourite IDE to run those samples.
To compile Gluon Substrate on Linux you need to install these development packages:
# on ubuntu (debian flavors)
apt-get install libasound2-dev libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavutil-dev libfreetype6-dev
apt-get install libgl-dev libglib2.0-dev libgtk-3-dev libpango1.0-dev libx11-dev libxtst-dev zlib1g-dev
# on fedora (redhat flavors), requires https://rpmfusion.org/
dnf install alsa-lib-devel freetype-devel glib2-devel gtk3-devel libX11-devel
dnf install libXtst-devel mesa-libGL-devel pango-devel zlib-devel
dnf install ffmpeg-devel
Issues can be reported to the Issue tracker
Contributions can be submitted via Pull requests, providing you have signed the Gluon Individual Contributor License Agreement (CLA).