This is the repository for the W3C GPU for the Web Community Group WebGPU API and WebGPU Shading Language (WGSL) specifications. This specification is formally standardized by the W3C GPU for the Web Working Group.
We use the wiki and issue tracker as the main sources of information related to the work. This repository will hold the actual specification, examples, etc.
Work-in-progress specification: https://gpuweb.github.io/gpuweb/
Work-in-progress WGSL specification: https://gpuweb.github.io/gpuweb/wgsl/
The charter for this group is maintained in a separate repository.
Membership in the Community Group is open to anyone. We especially encourage hardware vendors, browser engine developers, 3d software engineers and any Web Developers with expertise in graphics to participate. You'll need a W3C account to join, and if you're affiliated with a W3C member, your W3C representative will confirm your participation. If you're not a W3C member, you're still welcome. All participants are required to agree to the Contributor License Agreement.
You are not required to be a member of the Community Group or Working Group in order to file issues, errors, fixes or make suggestions. Anyone with a GitHub account can do so.
In order to assure that WebGPU specifications can be implemented on a Royalty-Free (RF) basis, all significant contributions need to be made with RF commitments. Members of the Working Group, and members of the Community Group who have signed the Final Specification Agreement have already committed to the terms of the W3C Patent Policy. Non-members will be requested to provide an RF commitment under terms similar to the W3C Patent Policy.
All contributions must comply with the group's contribution guidelines.
See CONTRIBUTING.md for technical guidance on contributing.
This group operates under W3C's Code of Conduct Policy.
Our primary public chat channel is via Matrix (what is matrix?) at #WebGPU:matrix.org.
For asynchronous concerns, we use Github for both our issue tracker and our discussions forum.
Both the Community Group and the Working Group have W3C email lists as well, though these are largely administrative.