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tangram-es

Travis CI Build Status

screenshot

tangram-es is a C++ library for rendering 2D and 3D maps from vector data using OpenGL ES, it is a counterpart to tangram focused on mobile and embedded devices.

This repository contains both the core rendering library and sample applications that use the library on Android, iOS, Mac OS X, Ubuntu, and Raspberry Pi.

tangram-es is in active development and is not yet feature-complete

build

This project uses CMake (minimum version 3.0), you can download it here or use your favorite installation package tool like homebrew.

brew install cmake

Make sure to update git submodules before you build:

git submodule init && git submodule update

Currently we are targeting five platforms: OS X, Ubuntu Linux, iOS, Android, and Raspberry Pi.

platforms

OS X (command line)

To build a runnable OS X application bundle, run:

make osx

And open the application with:

open build/osx/bin/tangram.app

OS X (Xcode)

For running on OS X from Xcode you will need Xcode version 6.0 or higher. Generate and compile an Xcode project:

make xcode

Then just open the Xcode project and run/debug from there:

open build/xcode/tangram.xcodeproj

Note that any Xcode configuration change you make to the project won't be preserved when CMake runs again. Build configuration is defined only in the CMakeLists file(s).

Ubuntu Linux

To build on Ubuntu you will need a C++ toolchain with support for C++14. GCC 4.9 (or higher) and Clang 3.4 (or higher) are known to work.

You will also need to install development packages for libcurl, x11, and opengl:

sudo apt-get install libcurl4-openssl-dev xorg-dev libgl1-mesa-dev

Then build an executable:

make linux

And run it from the output folder:

cd build/linux/bin/ && ./tangram

iOS Simulator

For running on the iOS simulator, generate and compile an Xcode project:

make ios-sim

Then just open the Xcode project and run/debug from there:

open build/ios-sim/tangram.xcodeproj

Note that any Xcode configuration change you make to the project won't be preserved when CMake runs again. Build configuration is defined only in the CMakeLists file(s).

iOS Devices

For running on iOS devices you will need an iOS developer account, a valid code signing certificate, and a valid provisioning profile. Help on these topics can be found at Apple's developer website.

First generate an Xcode project without compiling:

make cmake-ios

Then open the Xcode project and set up your developer account information to run on a device:

open build/ios/tangram.xcodeproj

If you run into problems deploying to an iOS device, see this note.

Android

To build for Android you'll need to have installed both the Android SDK and the Android NDK. Set an ANDROID_HOME environment variable with the root directory of your SDK and an ANDROID_NDK environment variable with the root directory of your NDK.

Build an APK of the demo application and optionally specify an architecture (default is armeabi-v7a):

make android [ANDROID_ARCH=[x86|armeabi-v7a|armeabi]]

Then install to a connected device or emulator. You can (re)install and run the APK with a small script:

./android/run.sh

Raspberry Pi

To build on Rasberry Pi you will need a C++ toolchain with support for C++14. GCC 4.9 (or higher) is known to work (refer here for instructions on getting GCC 4.9).

First, install CMake and libcurl:

sudo apt-get install cmake libcurl4-openssl-dev

Before compiling, choose which compiler to use:

export CXX=/usr/bin/g++-4.9

Then compile and run:

make rpi
cd build/rpi/bin
./tangram

Tangram will be rendered directly to the screen without a window manager, if you want see the mouse cursor run the application with the -m argument like this:

cd build/rpi/bin
./tangram -m

You can also move the map with w, a, s, and z, zoom in and out with - and =, and quit with q.

Code Style

In general, code changes should follow the style of the surrounding code.

When in doubt, you can use the provided clang-format style file for automatic styling.

Install clang-format (available through brew or apt-get):

brew install clang-format

or

sudo apt-get install clang-format

Run clang-format with specified style (use -i to modify the contents of the specified file):

clang-format -i -style=file [file]