this post was submitted on 15 Apr 2025
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Has anybody been able to build a statically linked binary that shows a Vulkan surface? I've put some context around this problem in the video. I understand that the vulkan driver has to be loaded dynamically - so it's more of a question whether a statically built app can reliably load and talk with it. I think it should be possible but haven't actually seen anyone make it work. I'm aware of "static-window9" by Andrew Kelley but sadly it doesn't work any more (at least on my Gentoo machine T_T).

(I'm also aware of AppImages but I don't think they're the "proper" solution to this problem - more like a temporary bandaid - better than Docker but still far from perfect)

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[–] maf@szmer.info 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I think of demoscene, game jams, desktop pets and other sorts of small home-brew software written by & for small groups of people. There is nothing embarrassing about one-off programs. I understand that what you said is just a figure of speech and you don't really think so (and thank you for a well thought comment) but it still makes me kind of sad to see this kind of shaming. It's discouraging people from being creative.

I'd say my bar is already low. A toy GUI program that draws a triangle and plays a sound should work on my friend's machine (with a different set of system libraries) and it shouldn't randomly break when OS update bumps some library version. AFAIK something like that would require a static binary (INTERP is a no-go) and an ability to dlopen stuff at runtime.

Writing software that "just works" shouldn't be as hard as it is.

[–] tiddy@sh.itjust.works 2 points 1 week ago

Sounds like flatpaks/appimages with extra steps

Includes all dependencies? ✔️

A single file? ✔️

Independent of host libraries? ✔️

Limited learning curve? ✔️

Not sure how appimages handle it internally, but with flatpaks you can even be storage efficient with layers, whereas 100s of static binaries could contain an awful lot of duplicates.