High Fidelity (hifi) is an early-stage technology lab experimenting with Virtual Worlds and VR.
This repository contains the source to many of the components in our
alpha-stage virtual world. The project embraces distributed development.
If you find a small bug and have a fix, pull requests are welcome.
We're hiring! We're looking for skilled developers; send your resume to [email protected]
Come chat with us in our Gitter if you have any questions or just want to say hi!
Documentation is available at docs.highfidelity.com, if something is missing, please suggest it via a new job on Worklist (add to the hifi-docs project).
There is also detailed documentation on our coding standards.
Technology companies frequently receive and use code from contributors outside the company's development team. Outside code can be a tremendous resource, but it also carries responsibility. Best practice for accepting outside contributions consists of an Apache-type Contributor License Agreement (CLA). We have modeled the High Fidelity CLA after the CLA that Google presents to developers for contributions to their projects. This CLA does not transfer ownership of code, instead simply granting a non-exclusive right for High Fidelity to use the code you’ve contributed. In that regard, you should be sure you have permission if the work relates to or uses the resources of a company that you work for. You will be asked to sign our CLA when you create your first PR or when the CLA is updated. You can also review it here. We sincerely appreciate your contribution and efforts toward the success of the platform.
All information required to build is found in the build guide.
When you launch interface, you will automatically connect to our default domain: "root.highfidelity.io".
If you don't see anything, make sure your preferences are pointing to root.highfidelity.io (set your domain via Cmnd+D/Cntrl+D). If you still have no luck, it's possible our servers are down. If you're experiencing a major bug, let us know by adding an issue to this repository. Include details about your computer and how to reproduce the bug in your issue.
To move around in-world, use the arrow keys (and Shift + up/down to fly up or down) or W A S D, and E or C to fly up/down. All of the other possible options and features are available via menus in the Interface application.
The assignment-client and domain-server are architectural components that will allow you to run the full stack of the virtual world.
In order to set up your own virtual world, you need to set up and run your own local "domain".
The domain-server gives a number different types of assignments to the assignment-client for different features: audio, avatars, voxels, particles, meta-voxels and models.
Follow the instructions in the build guide to build the various components.
From the domain-server build directory, launch a domain-server.
./domain-server
Then, run an assignment-client. The assignment-client uses localhost as its assignment-server and talks to it on port 40102 (the default domain-server port).
In a new Terminal window, run:
./assignment-client
Any target can be terminated with Ctrl-C (SIGINT) in the associated Terminal window.
This assignment-client will grab one assignment from the domain-server. You can tell the
assignment-client what type you want it to be with the -t
option. You can also run an
assignment-client that forks off n assignment-clients with the -n
option. The -min
and -max
options allow you to set a range of required assignment-clients. This allows
you to have flexibility in the number of assignment-clients that are running.
See --help
for more options.
./assignment-client --min 6 --max 20
To test things out, you'll need to run the Interface client.
To access your local domain in Interface, open your Preferences. On OS X, this is available in the Interface menu. On Linux, you'll find it in the File menu. Enter "localhost" in the "Domain server" field.
If everything worked, you should see that you are connected to at least one server. Nice work!