This is about compiling and linking applications that use GLFW. For information on how to write such applications, start with the introductory tutorial. For information on how to compile the GLFW library itself, see Compiling GLFW.
This is not a tutorial on compilation or linking. It assumes basic understanding of how to compile and link a C program as well as how to use the specific compiler of your chosen development environment. The compilation and linking process should be explained in your C programming material and in the documentation for your development environment.
You should include the GLFW header in the source files where you use OpenGL or GLFW.
This header defines all the constants and declares all the types and function prototypes of the GLFW API. By default it also includes the OpenGL header from your development environment. See option macros below for how to select OpenGL ES headers and more.
The GLFW header also defines any platform-specific macros needed by your OpenGL header, so that it can be included without needing any window system headers.
It does this only when needed, so if window system headers are included, the GLFW header does not try to redefine those symbols. The reverse is not true, i.e. windows.h
cannot cope if any Win32 symbols have already been defined.
In other words:
If you are using an OpenGL extension loading library such as glad, the extension loader header should be included before the GLFW one. GLFW attempts to detect any OpenGL or OpenGL ES header or extension loader header included before it and will then disable the inclusion of the default OpenGL header. Most extension loaders also define macros that disable similar headers below it.
Both of these mechanisms depend on the extension loader header defining a known macro. If yours doesn't or you don't know which one your users will pick, the GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE macro will explicitly prevent the GLFW header from including the OpenGL header. This will also allow you to include the two headers in any order.
These macros may be defined before the inclusion of the GLFW header and affect its behavior.
GLFW_DLL is required on Windows when using the GLFW DLL, to tell the compiler that the GLFW functions are defined in a DLL.
The following macros control which OpenGL or OpenGL ES API header is included. Only one of these may be defined at a time.
GLFW_INCLUDE_GLCOREARB makes the GLFW header include the modern GL/glcorearb.h
header (OpenGL/gl3.h
on macOS) instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_ES1 makes the GLFW header include the OpenGL ES 1.x GLES/gl.h
header instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_ES2 makes the GLFW header include the OpenGL ES 2.0 GLES2/gl2.h
header instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_ES3 makes the GLFW header include the OpenGL ES 3.0 GLES3/gl3.h
header instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_ES31 makes the GLFW header include the OpenGL ES 3.1 GLES3/gl31.h
header instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_ES32 makes the GLFW header include the OpenGL ES 3.2 GLES3/gl32.h
header instead of the regular OpenGL header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_NONE makes the GLFW header not include any OpenGL or OpenGL ES API header. This is useful in combination with an extension loading library.
If none of the above inclusion macros are defined, the standard OpenGL GL/gl.h
header (OpenGL/gl.h
on macOS) is included, unless GLFW detects the inclusion guards of any OpenGL, OpenGL ES or extension loader header it knows about.
The following macros control the inclusion of additional API headers. Any number of these may be defined simultaneously, and/or together with one of the above macros.
GLFW_INCLUDE_VULKAN makes the GLFW header include the Vulkan vulkan/vulkan.h
header in addition to any selected OpenGL or OpenGL ES header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_GLEXT makes the GLFW header include the appropriate extension header for the OpenGL or OpenGL ES header selected above after and in addition to that header.
GLFW_INCLUDE_GLU makes the header include the GLU header in addition to the header selected above. This should only be used with the standard OpenGL header and only for compatibility with legacy code. GLU has been deprecated and should not be used in new code.
GLFW is essentially a wrapper of various platform-specific APIs and therefore needs to link against many different system libraries. If you are using GLFW as a shared library / dynamic library / DLL then it takes care of these links. However, if you are using GLFW as a static library then your executable will need to link against these libraries.
On Windows and macOS, the list of system libraries is static and can be hard-coded into your build environment. See the section for your development environment below. On Linux and other Unix-like operating systems, the list varies but can be retrieved in various ways as described below.
A good general introduction to linking is Beginner's Guide to Linkers by David Drysdale.
The static version of the GLFW library is named glfw3
. When using this version, it is also necessary to link with some libraries that GLFW uses.
When using MinGW to link an application with the static version of GLFW, you must also explicitly link with gdi32
. Other toolchains including MinGW-w64 include it in the set of default libraries along with other dependencies like user32
and kernel32
.
The link library for the GLFW DLL is named glfw3dll
. When compiling an application that uses the DLL version of GLFW, you need to define the GLFW_DLL macro before any inclusion of the GLFW header. This can be done either with a compiler switch or by defining it in your source code.
This section is about using CMake to compile and link GLFW along with your application. If you want to use an installed binary instead, see With CMake and installed GLFW binaries.
With a few changes to your CMakeLists.txt
you can have the GLFW source tree built along with your application.
When including GLFW as part of your build, you probably don't want to build the GLFW tests, examples and documentation. To disable these, set the corresponding cache variables before adding the GLFW source tree.
Add the root directory of the GLFW source tree to your project. This will add the glfw
target to your project.
Once GLFW has been added, link your application against the glfw
target. This adds the GLFW library and its link-time dependencies as it is currently configured, the include directory for the GLFW header and, when applicable, the GLFW_DLL macro.
Note that the glfw
target does not depend on OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls OpenGL directly, instead of using a modern extension loader library, use the OpenGL CMake package.
If OpenGL is found, the OpenGL::GL
target is added to your project, containing library and include directory paths. Link against this like any other library.
For a minimal example of a program and GLFW sources built with CMake, see the GLFW CMake Starter on GitHub.
This section is about using CMake to link GLFW after it has been built and installed. If you want to build it along with your application instead, see With CMake and GLFW source.
With a few changes to your CMakeLists.txt
you can locate the package and target files generated when GLFW is installed.
Once GLFW has been added to the project, link against it with the glfw
target. This adds the GLFW library and its link-time dependencies, the include directory for the GLFW header and, when applicable, the GLFW_DLL macro.
Note that the glfw
target does not depend on OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls OpenGL directly, instead of using a modern extension loader library, use the OpenGL CMake package.
If OpenGL is found, the OpenGL::GL
target is added to your project, containing library and include directory paths. Link against this like any other library.
GLFW supports pkg-config, and the glfw3.pc
pkg-config file is generated when the GLFW library is built and is installed along with it. A pkg-config file describes all necessary compile-time and link-time flags and dependencies needed to use a library. When they are updated or if they differ between systems, you will get the correct ones automatically.
A typical compile and link command-line when using the static version of the GLFW library may look like this:
If you are using the shared version of the GLFW library, omit the --static
flag.
You can also use the glfw3.pc
file without installing it first, by using the PKG_CONFIG_PATH
environment variable.
The dependencies do not include OpenGL, as GLFW loads any OpenGL, OpenGL ES or Vulkan libraries it needs at runtime. If your application calls OpenGL directly, instead of using a modern extension loader library, you should add the gl
pkg-config package.
If you are using the dynamic library version of GLFW, add it to the project dependencies.
If you are using the static library version of GLFW, add it and the Cocoa, OpenGL and IOKit frameworks to the project as dependencies. They can all be found in /System/Library/Frameworks
.
It is recommended that you use pkg-config when building from the command line on macOS. That way you will get any new dependencies added automatically. If you still wish to build manually, you need to add the required frameworks and libraries to your command-line yourself using the -l
and -framework
switches.
If you are using the dynamic GLFW library, which is named libglfw.3.dylib
, do:
If you are using the static library, named libglfw3.a
, substitute -lglfw3
for -lglfw
.
Note that you do not add the .framework
extension to a framework when linking against it from the command-line.
libGL.*.dylib
style OpenGL library, but that is for the X Window System and will not work with the macOS native version of GLFW. Last update on Fri Jul 22 2022 for GLFW 3.3.8