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h1>The Mesa 3D Graphics Library<
/h1>
<
h1>Application Issues<
/h1>
This page documents known issues with some OpenGL applications.
<
a href="http://www.topogun.com/">Topogun<
/a>
for Linux
(version 2, at least
)
creates a GLX visual without requesting a depth buffer.
This causes bad rendering if the OpenGL driver happens to choose a visual
without a depth buffer.
Mesa 9.1.2 and later (will) support a DRI configuration option to work around
this issue.
Using the <
a href="http://dri.freedesktop.org/wiki/DriConf">driconf<
/a> tool,
set the "Create all visuals with a depth buffer" option before running Topogun.
Then, all GLX visuals will be created with a depth buffer.
<
h2>Old OpenGL games<
/h2>
Some old OpenGL games (approx. ten years or older) may crash during
start-up because of an extension string buffer-overflow problem.
The problem is a modern OpenGL driver will return a very long string
for the glGetString(GL_EXTENSIONS) query and if the application
naively copies the string into a fixed-size buffer it can overflow the
buffer and crash the application.
The work-around is to set the MESA_EXTENSION_MAX_YEAR environment variable
to the approximate release year of the game.
This will cause the glGetString(GL_EXTENSIONS) query to only report extensions
older than the given year.
For example, if the game was released in 2001, do
export MESA_EXTENSION_MAX_YEAR=2001
before running the game.
See the <
a href="viewperf.html">Viewperf issues<
/a> page
for a detailed list
of Viewperf issues.