This project contains everything necessary to develop extensions that contain C++ code, along with a number of examples demonstrating best practices for creating them.
While an extension can consist of a single extension.toml
file, most contain Python code, C++ code, or a mixture of both:
Kit
|
___________________________________|___________________________________
| | |
Python Only C++ Only Mixed
(eg. omni.example.python.hello_world) (eg. omni.example.cpp.hello_world) (eg. omni.example.cpp.pybind)
Extensive documentation detailing what extensions are and how they work can be found here.
- Clone the GitHub repo to your local machine.
- Open a command prompt and navigate to the root of your cloned repo.
- Run
build.bat
to bootstrap your dev environment and build the example extensions. - Run
_build\{platform}\release\omni.app.example.extension_browser.bat
to open an example kit application.- Run
omni.app.example.viewport.bat
instead if you want the renderer and main viewport to be enabled. - Run
omni.app.kit.dev.bat
instead if you want the full kit developer experience to be enabled.
- Run
- From the menu, select
Window->Extensions
to open the extension browser window. - Enter
omni.example.cpp
in the search bar at the top of the extension browser window to view the example extensions included with this repo.
- Run
build.bat
(if you haven't already) to generate the solution file. - Open
_compiler\vs2019\kit-extension-template-cpp.sln
using Visual Studio 2019. - Select
omni.app.example.extension_browser
as the startup project (if it isn't already).- Select
omni.app.example.viewport
instead if you want the renderer and main viewport to be enabled. - Select
omni.app.kit.dev
instead if you want the full kit developer experience to be enabled.
- Select
- Run/debug the example kit application, using the extension browser window to enable/disable extensions.
- Copy one of the existing extension examples to a new folder within the
source/extensions
folder.- The name of the new folder will be the name of your new extension.
- The omni prefix is reserved for NVIDIA applications and extensions.
- Update the fields in your new extension's
config/extension.toml
file as necessary. - Update your new extension's
premake5.lua
file as necessary. - Update your new extension's C++ code in the
plugins
folder as necessary. - Update your new extension's Python code in the
python
folder as necessary. - Update your new extension's Python bindings in the
bindings
folder as necessary. - Update your new extension's documentation in the
docs
folder as necessary. - Run
build.bat
to build your new extension. - Refer to the Getting Started section above to open the example kit application and extension browser window.
- Enter the name of your new extension in the search bar at the top of the extension browser window to view it.
- Run
repo.bat docs
to generate the documentation for the repo, including all extensions it contains.- You can generate the documentation for a single extension by running
repo.bat docs -p {extension_name}
- You can generate the documentation for a single extension by running
- Open
_build/docs/kit-extension-template-cpp/latest/index.html
to view the generated documentation.
Developers can publish publicly hosted extensions to the community extension registry using the following steps:
-
Tag the GitHub repository with the omniverse-kit-extension tag.
-
Create a GitHub release.
-
Upload the packaged extension archives, created with
./repo.bat package
on Windows or./repo.sh package
on Linux, to the GitHub release. You must rename the packaged extension archive to match the following convention:- Linux:
{github-namespace}-{github-repository}-linux-x86_64-{github-release-tag}.zip
- Windows:
{github-namespace}-{github-repository}-windows-x86_64-{github-release-tag}.zip
- Linux:
For example, the v0.0.2 release of the extension at https://github.com/jshrake-nvidia/kit-community-release-test/releases/tag/v0.0.2 has archives named jshrake-nvidia-kit-community-release-test-linux-x86_64-v0.0.2.zip
and jshrake-nvidia-kit-community-release-test-windows-x86_64-v0.0.2.zip
for Linux and Windows, respectively.
Our publishing pipeline runs nightly and discovers any publicly hosted GitHub repository with the omniverse-kit-extension
tag. The published extensions should be visible in the community registry the day following the creation of a GitHub release.
Refer to the kit extension documentation for how to specify the Kit version compatibility for your extension. This ensures that the correct version of your extension is listed in any given Kit application.
The source code for this repository is provided as-is and we are not accepting outside contributions.