OpenGL.GL.ARB.compute_shader

OpenGL extension ARB.compute_shader
This module customises the behaviour of the OpenGL.raw.GL.ARB.compute_shader to provide a more Python-friendly API
Overview (from the spec)
Recent graphics hardware has become extremely powerful and a strong desire to harness this power for work (both graphics and non-graphics) that does not fit the traditional graphics pipeline well has emerged. To address this, this extension adds a new single-stage program type known as a compute program. This program may contain one or more compute shaders which may be launched in a manner that is essentially stateless. This allows arbitrary workloads to be sent to the graphics hardware with minimal disturbance to the GL state machine.
In most respects, a compute program is identical to a traditional OpenGL program object, with similar status, uniforms, and other such properties. It has access to many of the same resources as fragment and other shader types, such as textures, image variables, atomic counters, and so on. However, it has no predefined inputs nor any fixed-function outputs. It cannot be part of a pipeline and its visible side effects are through its actions on images and atomic counters.
OpenCL is another solution for using graphics processors as generalized compute devices. This extension addresses a different need. For example, OpenCL is designed to be usable on a wide range of devices ranging from CPUs, GPUs, and DSPs through to FPGAs. While one could implement GL on these types of devices, the target here is clearly GPUs. Another difference is that OpenCL is more full featured and includes features such as multiple devices, asynchronous queues and strict IEEE semantics for floating point operations. This extension follows the semantics of OpenGL - implicitly synchronous, in-order operation with single-device, single queue logical architecture and somewhat more relaxed numerical precision requirements. Although not as feature rich, this extension offers several advantages for applications that can tolerate the omission of these features. Compute shaders are written in GLSL, for example and so code may be shared between compute and other shader types. Objects are created and owned by the same context as the rest of the GL, and therefore no interoperability API is required and objects may be freely used by both compute and graphics simultaneously without acquire-release semantics or object type translation.
The official definition of this extension is available here: http://www.opengl.org/registry/specs/ARB/compute_shader.txt

Functions

glDispatchCompute( num_groups_x , num_groups_y , num_groups_z )

Constants

GL_ATOMIC_COUNTER_BUFFER_REFERENCED_BY_COMPUTE_SHADER (37101)
GL_COMPUTE_SHADER (37305)
GL_COMPUTE_SHADER_BIT (32)
GL_COMPUTE_WORK_GROUP_SIZE (33383)
GL_DISPATCH_INDIRECT_BUFFER (37102)
GL_DISPATCH_INDIRECT_BUFFER_BINDING (37103)
GL_MAX_COMBINED_COMPUTE_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS (33382)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_ATOMIC_COUNTER_BUFFERS (33380)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_ATOMIC_COUNTERS (33381)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_IMAGE_UNIFORMS (37309)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_SHARED_MEMORY_SIZE (33378)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS (37308)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_UNIFORM_BLOCKS (37307)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_UNIFORM_COMPONENTS (33379)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_WORK_GROUP_COUNT (37310)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_WORK_GROUP_INVOCATIONS (37099)
GL_MAX_COMPUTE_WORK_GROUP_SIZE (37311)
GL_UNIFORM_BLOCK_REFERENCED_BY_COMPUTE_SHADER (37100)