Render advanced 3D graphics and perform data-parallel computations using graphics processors using Metal.

Posts under Metal tag

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Hover effects w/ Compositor Services w/ PSVR2 controllers
Hi, I would like clarification on whether the new hover effects feature introduced in vision os 26 supported pinch gestures through the psvr 2 controllers. In your sample application, I was not able to confirm that this was working. Only pinch clicking with my hands worked. Pulling the trigger on the controller whilst looking at a 3d object did not activate the hover effect spatial event in the sample application. (The object is showing the highlight though) This is inconsistent with hover effect behavior with psvr2 controllers on swift ui views, where the trigger press does count as a button click. The sample I used was this one: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/compositorservices/rendering_hover_effects_in_metal_immersive_apps
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Jan ’26
Metal debug log in Swift Package
My goal is to print a debug message from a shader. I follow the guide that orders to set -fmetal-enable-logging metal compiler flag and following environment variables: MTL_LOG_LEVEL=MTLLogLevelDebug MTL_LOG_BUFFER_SIZE=2048 MTL_LOG_TO_STDERR=1 However there's an issue with the guide, it's only covers Xcode project setup, however I'm working on a Swift Package. It has a Metal-only target that's included into main target like this: targets: [ // A separate target for shaders. .target( name: "MetalShaders", resources: [ .process("Metal") ], plugins: [ // https://github.com/schwa/MetalCompilerPlugin .plugin(name: "MetalCompilerPlugin", package: "MetalCompilerPlugin") ] ), // Main target .target( name: "MegApp", dependencies: ["MetalShaders"] ), .testTarget( name: "MegAppTests", dependencies: [ "MegApp", "MetalShaders", ] ] So to apply compiler flag I use MetalCompilerPlugin which emits debug.metallib, it also allows to define DEBUG macro for shaders. This code compiles: #ifdef DEBUG logger.log_error("Hello There!"); os_log_default.log_debug("Hello thread: %d", gid); // this proves that code exectutes result.flag = true; #endif Environment is set via .xctestplan and valideted to work with ProcessInfo. However, nothing is printed to Xcode console nor to Console app. In attempt to fix it I'm trying to setup a MTLLogState, however the makeLogState(descriptor:) fails with error: if #available(iOS 18.0, *) { let logDescriptor = MTLLogStateDescriptor() logDescriptor.level = .debug logDescriptor.bufferSize = 2048 // Error Domain=MTLLogStateErrorDomain Code=2 "Cannot create residency set for MTLLogState: (null)" UserInfo={NSLocalizedDescription=Cannot create residency set for MTLLogState: (null)} let logState = try! device.makeLogState(descriptor: logDescriptor) commandBufferDescriptor.logState = logState } Some LLMs suggested that this is connected with Simulator, and truly, I run the tests on simulator. However tests don't want to run on iPhone... I found solution running them on My Mac (Mac Catalyst). Surprisingly descriptor log works there, even without MTLLogState. But the Simulator behaviour seems like a bug...
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Jan ’26
# [CRITICAL] Metal RHI Memory Leak - Resource exhaustion vulnerability (CWE-400) - Bug Report
[CRITICAL] Metal API Memory Leak - Heap Memory Never Released to OS (CWE-400) Security Classification This issue constitutes a resource exhaustion vulnerability (CWE-400): Aspect Details Type Uncontrolled Resource Consumption CWE CWE-400 Vector Local (any Metal application) Impact System instability, denial of service User Control None - no mitigation available Recovery Requires application restart Summary Metal heap allocations are never released back to macOS, even when the memory is entirely unused. This causes continuous, unbounded memory growth until system instability or crash. The issue affects any application using Metal API heap allocation. This was discovered in Unreal Engine 5, but reproduces in a completely blank UE5 project with zero application code - confirming this is Metal framework behavior, not application-level. Environment OS: macOS Tahoe 26.2 Hardware: Apple Silicon M4 Max (also reproduced on M1, M2, M3) API: Metal Reproduction Steps Run any Metal application that allocates and deallocates GPU buffers via Metal heaps Open Activity Monitor and observe the application's memory usage Let the application run idle (no user interaction required) Observe memory growing continuously at ~1-2 MB per second Memory never plateaus or stabilizes Eventually system becomes unstable For testing: Any Unreal Engine 5.4+ project on macOS will reproduce this. Even a blank project with no gameplay code exhibits the leak. (Tested on UE 5.7.1) Observed Behavior Memory Analysis Using Unreal's memreport -full command, two reports taken 86 seconds apart: Metric Report 1 (183s) Report 2 (269s) Delta Process Physical 4373.64 MB 4463.39 MB +89.75 MB Metal Heap Buffer 7168 MB 8192 MB +1024 MB Unused Heap 3453 MB 4477 MB +1024 MB Object Count 73,840 73,840 0 (no change) Key Finding Metal Heap grew by exactly 1 GB while "Unused Heap" also grew by 1 GB. This demonstrates: Metal is allocating new heap blocks in ~1 GB increments Previously allocated heap memory becomes "unused" but is never released The unused memory accumulates indefinitely No application-level objects are leaking (count remains constant) Memory Growth Pattern Continuous growth while idle (no user interaction) Growth rate: approximately 1-2 MB per second No plateau or stabilization occurs Metal allocates new 1 GB heap blocks rather than reusing freed space Eventually leads to system instability and crash What is NOT Causing This We verified the following are NOT the source: Application objects - Object count remains constant Application code - Blank project with no code reproduces the issue Texture streaming - Disabling texture streaming had no effect CPU garbage collection - Running GC has no effect (this is GPU memory) Mitigations Attempted (None Worked) setPurgeableState Setting resources to purgeable state before release: [buffer setPurgeableState:MTLPurgeableStateEmpty]; Result: Metal ignores this hint and does not reclaim heap memory. Avoiding Heap Pooling Forcing individual buffer allocations instead of heap-based pooling. Result: Leak persists - Metal still manages underlying allocations. Aggressive Buffer Compaction Attempting to compact/defragment buffers within heaps every frame. Result: Only moves data between existing heaps. Does NOT release heaps back to OS. Reducing Pool Sizes Minimizing all buffer pool sizes to force more frequent reuse. Result: Slightly slows the leak rate but does not stop it. Root Cause Analysis How Metal Heap Allocation Appears to Work Metal allocates GPU heap blocks in large chunks (~1 GB observed) Application requests buffers from these heaps When application releases buffers, memory becomes "unused" within the heap Metal does NOT release heap blocks back to macOS, even when entirely unused When fragmentation prevents reuse, Metal allocates new heap blocks Result: Continuous memory growth with no upper bound The Core Problem There appears to be no Metal API to force heap memory release. The only way to reclaim this memory is to destroy the Metal device entirely, which requires restarting the application. Expected Behavior Metal should: Release unused heaps - When a heap block is entirely unused, release it back to macOS Respect purgeable hints - Honor setPurgeableState calls from applications Compact allocations - Defragment heap allocations to reduce fragmentation Provide control APIs - Allow applications to request heap compaction or release Enforce limits - Have configurable maximum heap memory consumption Security Implications Local Denial of Service - Any Metal application can exhaust system memory, causing instability affecting all running applications Memory Pressure Attack - Forces other applications to swap to disk, degrading system-wide performance No Upper Bound - Memory consumption continues until system failure Unmitigable - End users have no way to prevent or limit the leak Affects All Metal Apps - Any application using Metal heaps is potentially affected Impact Applications become unstable after extended use System-wide performance degrades as memory pressure increases Users must periodically restart applications Developers cannot work around this at the application level Long-running applications (games, creative tools, servers) are particularly affected Request Investigate Metal heap memory management behavior Implement heap release when blocks become entirely unused Honor setPurgeableState hints from applications Consider providing an API for applications to request heap compaction Document any intended behavior or workarounds Additional Notes This issue has been observed across multiple Unreal Engine versions (5.4, 5.7) and multiple Apple Silicon generations (M1 through M4). The behavior is consistent and reproducible. The Unreal Engine team has implemented various CVars to attempt mitigation (rhi.Metal.HeapBufferBytesToCompact, rhi.Metal.ResourcePurgeInPool, etc.) but none successfully address the issue because the root cause is at the Metal framework level. Tested: January 2026 Platform: macOS Tahoe 26.2, Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3/M4)
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Jan ’26
'__abort_with_payload' from CompositorNonUI on visionOS 26.2 (device + simulator, Omniverse streaming)
I am developing a custom app for Apple Vision Pro using Compositor Services to stream content from NVIDIA Omniverse. The app is based on: https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/apple-configurator-sample Environment: Device: Apple Vision Pro OS Version: visionOS 26.2 Xcode Version: 26.2 The Issue: The application crashes hard (__abort_with_payload) in "libsystem_kernel.dylib" on Task 6 immediately after initialization. This appears to be a deliberate abort triggered by the compositor, not a typical crash. The issue occurs on both physical device and simulator. Important detail: The console output shows a specific CLIENT BUG assertion. By checking the metadata of the warning, I found that it is related to "Library: CompositorNonUI". Relevant console output before abort: Missed 'FrameLimiter' target of 90.0 Hz running compositor services to get IPD, FOV, etc fence tx observer 14f27 timed out after 0.600000 fence tx observer bc1b timed out after 0.600000 BUG IN CLIENT: For mixed reality experiences please use cp_drawable_compute_projection API
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Jan ’26
SpriteKit Offline Rendering with SKRenderer
Hi! I'd like to share a technical sample app, SKRenderer Demo. This app demonstrates: Setting up SKRenderer Recording SpriteKit scenes to image sequences Recording SpriteKit scenes to video using IOSurface and AVFoundation Applying Core Image filters Exploring SpriteKit's simulation timing and physics determinism Use Case Record SpriteKit simulations as video or images for sharing and creating content. I explored several approaches, including the excellent view.texture(from:crop:) for live recording from SKView. The SKRenderer approach assumes recording happens asynchronously: you capture user interactions as commands during live interaction, then replay those commands through an offline render pass to generate the final output. I hope this helps others working on replay systems, simulation capture, or SpriteKit projects in general!
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Jan ’26
Linker trying to link Metal toolchain for every object file on Catalyst
When building our project for Mac Catalyst with Xcode 26.2, we get this warning almost a hundred times, once for every object file: directory not found for option '-L/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst' Somehow, every Link <FileName>.o build step got the following parameter, regardless if the target contained Metal files or not: -L/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst The toolchain is mounted at this point, but the directory usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst doesn't exist. When building the project for iOS, the option doesn't exist and the warning is not shown. We already check the build settings, but we couldn't find a reason why the linker is trying to link against the toolchain here. Even for targets that do contain Metal files, we get the following linker warning: search path '/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst' not found Is this a known issue? Is there a way to get rid of these warnings?
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Mar ’26
Metal 4: Proper usage of requestResidency() with unique per-frame textures at 120fps
Hello, I have some confusion regarding ResidencySet. Specifically, about the requestResidency() function: how often should we call it? I have a captureOutput(_:didOutput:from:) method that is triggered at 60 or 120 fps. Inside this method, I am calling the following code every frame: computeResidencySet.removeAllAllocations() сomputeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureA) computeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureB) computeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureC) computeResidencySet.commit() computeResidencySet.requestResidency() // Should we call it every frame? Please keep in mind that TextureA, TextureB, and TextureC are unique for each call (new instances are provided on every frame)."
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Jan ’26
Xcode Metal Trace
Code is download from apple official metal4 sample [https://developer.apple.com/documentation/metal/drawing-a-triangle-with-metal-4?language=objc] enable metal gpu trace in macOS schema and trace a frame in Xcode. Xcode may show segment fault on App from some 'GTTrace' function when click trace button. When replay a .gputrace file, Xcode may crash , throw an internal error or a XPC error. The example code using old metal-renderer can trace without any problem and everything works fine. Test Environment: Xcode Version 26.2 (17C52) macOS 26.2 (25C56) M1 Pro 16GB A2442
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Jan ’26
Optimizing HZB Mip-Chain Generation and Bindless Argument Tables in a Custom Metal Engine
Hi everyone, I’ve been developing a custom, end-to-end 3D rendering engine called Crescent from scratch using C++20 and Metal-cpp (targeting macOS and visionOS). My primary goal is to build a zero-bottleneck, GPU-driven pipeline that maximizes the potential of Apple Silicon’s Unified Memory and TBDR architecture. While the fundamental systems are stable, I am looking for architectural feedback from Metal framework engineers regarding specific synchronization and latency challenges. Current Core Implementations: GPU-Driven Instance Culling: High-performance occlusion culling using a Hierarchical Z-Buffer (HZB) approach via Compute Shaders. Clustered Forward Shading: Support for high-count dynamic lights through view-space clustering. Temporal Stability: Custom TAA with history rejection and Motion Blur resolve. Asset Infrastructure: Robust GUID-based scene serialization and a JSON-driven ECS hierarchy. The Architectural Challenge: I am currently seeing slight synchronization overhead when generating the HZB mip-chain. On Apple Silicon, I am evaluating the cost of encoder transitions versus cache-friendly barriers. && m_hzbInitPipeline && m_hzbDownsamplePipeline && !m_hzbMipViews.empty(); if (canBuildHzb) { MTL::ComputeCommandEncoder* hzbInit = commandBuffer->computeCommandEncoder(); hzbInit->setComputePipelineState(m_hzbInitPipeline); hzbInit->setTexture(m_depthTexture, 0); hzbInit->setTexture(m_hzbMipViews[0], 1); if (m_pointClampSampler) { hzbInit->setSamplerState(m_pointClampSampler, 0); } else if (m_linearClampSampler) { hzbInit->setSamplerState(m_linearClampSampler, 0); } const uint32_t hzbWidth = m_hzbMipViews[0]->width(); const uint32_t hzbHeight = m_hzbMipViews[0]->height(); const uint32_t threads = 8; MTL::Size tgSize = MTL::Size(threads, threads, 1); MTL::Size gridSize = MTL::Size((hzbWidth + threads - 1) / threads * threads, (hzbHeight + threads - 1) / threads * threads, 1); hzbInit->dispatchThreads(gridSize, tgSize); hzbInit->endEncoding(); for (size_t mip = 1; mip < m_hzbMipViews.size(); ++mip) { MTL::Texture* src = m_hzbMipViews[mip - 1]; MTL::Texture* dst = m_hzbMipViews[mip]; if (!src || !dst) { continue; } MTL::ComputeCommandEncoder* downEncoder = commandBuffer->computeCommandEncoder(); downEncoder->setComputePipelineState(m_hzbDownsamplePipeline); downEncoder->setTexture(src, 0); downEncoder->setTexture(dst, 1); const uint32_t mipWidth = dst->width(); const uint32_t mipHeight = dst->height(); MTL::Size downGrid = MTL::Size((mipWidth + threads - 1) / threads * threads, (mipHeight + threads - 1) / threads * threads, 1); downEncoder->dispatchThreads(downGrid, tgSize); downEncoder->endEncoding(); } if (m_instanceCullHzbPipeline) { dispatchInstanceCulling(m_instanceCullHzbPipeline, true); } } My Questions: Encoder Synchronization: Would you recommend moving this loop into a single ComputeCommandEncoder using MTLBarrier between dispatches to maintain L2 cache residency, or is the overhead of separate encoders negligible for depth-downsampling on TBDR? visionOS Bindless Latency: For stereo rendering on visionOS, what are the best practices for managing MTL4ArgumentTable updates at 90Hz+? I want to ensure that updating bindless resources for each eye doesn't introduce unnecessary CPU-to-GPU latency. Memory Management: Are there specific hints for Memoryless textures that could be applied to intermediate HZB levels to save bandwidth during this process? I’ve attached a screenshot of a scene rendered with the engine (PBR, SSR, and IBL).
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Feb ’26
Open Shading Language (OSL) in Metal
Hi. I'm a 3D designer, using Blender for most of my work. The most recent Blender conference discussed utilizing the Open Shading Language (OSL) in their latest versions, which allows designers to write custom shaders for their workflows. At the moment, only Nvidia Optix GPU's can utilize this language for rendering (from what I understand), but Blender developers stated they are waiting on other GPU manufacturers to implement this feature as well. I'm not sure if there are any licensing issues here, but would this be something Apple could implement in Metal to make their hardware more attractive to the 3D design community? Any help or knowledge on this topic would be greatly appreciated.
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Feb ’26
Unable to find intelgpu_kbl_gt2r0 slice or a compatible one in binary archive
Unable to find intelgpu_kbl_gt2r0 slice or a compatible one in binary archive 'file:///System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/IconRendering.framework/Resources/binary.metallib' available slices: applegpu_g13g, applegpu_g13s, applegpu_g13d, applegpu_g14g, applegpu_g14s, applegpu_g14d, applegpu_g15g, applegpu_g15s, applegpu_g15d, applegpu_g16g, applegpu_g16s, applegpu_g17g, applegpu_g15g, applegpu_g15s, applegpu_g15d, applegpu_g16s Is it related to performance of applications in macOS 26.2 on Intel Macs?
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Feb ’26
Can a Swift Student Challenge submission include .metal shader files ?
Hello developers, i have a project for SSC that includes metal shader code. The project runs fine when I build and run it in Xcode, but it does not run in the Swift Playground app. The reason is that Swift Playgrounds doesn’t compile/build source files with the .metal extension the same way Xcode does (so the shader never gets built/loaded in Playgrounds). The requirements say: “Your app playground must be built with and run on Swift Playgrounds 4.6 or Xcode 26, or later.” Since it says “or” (not “and”), does that mean it’s acceptable if the project only builds/runs in Xcode?
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Feb ’26
Core Image for depth maps & segmentation masks: numeric fidelity issues when rendering CIImage to CVPixelBuffer (looking for Architecture suggestions)
Hello All, I’m working on a computer-vision–heavy iOS application that uses the camera, LiDAR depth maps, and semantic segmentation to reason about the environment (object identification, localization and measurement - not just visualization). Current architecture I initially built the image pipeline around CIImage as a unifying abstraction. It seemed like a good idea because: CIImage integrates cleanly with Vision, ARKit, AVFoundation, Metal, Core Graphics, etc. It provides a rich set of out-of-the-box transforms and filters. It is immutable and thread-safe, which significantly simplified concurrency in a multi-queue pipeline. The LiDAR depth maps, semantic segmentation masks, etc. were treated as CIImages, with conversion to CVPixelBuffer or MTLTexture only at the edges when required. Problem I’ve run into cases where Core Image transformations do not preserve numeric fidelity for non-visual data. Example: Rendering a CIImage-backed segmentation mask into a larger CVPixelBuffer can cause label values to change in predictable but incorrect ways. This occurs even when: using nearest-neighbor sampling disabling color management (workingColorSpace / outputColorSpace = NSNull) applying identity or simple affine transforms I’ve confirmed via controlled tests that: Metal → CVPixelBuffer paths preserve values correctly CIImage → CVPixelBuffer paths can introduce value changes when resampling or expanding the render target This makes CIImage unsafe as a source of numeric truth for segmentation masks and depth-based logic, even though it works well for visualization, and I should have realized this much sooner. Direction I’m considering I’m now considering refactoring toward more intent-based abstractions instead of a single image type, for example: Visual images: CIImage (camera frames, overlays, debugging, UI) Scalar fields: depth / confidence maps backed by CVPixelBuffer + Metal Label maps: segmentation masks backed by integer-preserving buffers (no interpolation, no transforms) In this model, CIImage would still be used extensively — but primarily for visualization and perceptual processing, not as the container for numerically sensitive data. Thread safety concern One of the original advantages of CIImage was that it is thread-safe by design, and that was my biggest incentive. For CVPixelBuffer / MTLTexture–backed data, I’m considering enforcing thread safety explicitly via: Swift Concurrency (actor-owned data, explicit ownership) Questions For those may have experience with CV / AR / imaging-heavy iOS apps, I was hoping to know the following: Is this separation of image intent (visual vs numeric vs categorical) a reasonable architectural direction? Do you generally keep CIImage at the heart of your pipeline, or push it to the edges (visualization only)? How do you manage thread safety and ownership when working heavily with CVPixelBuffer and Metal? Using actor-based abstractions, GCD, or adhoc? Are there any best practices or gotchas around using Core Image with depth maps or segmentation masks that I should be aware of? I’d really appreciate any guidance or experience-based advice. I suspect I’ve hit a boundary of Core Image’s design, and I’m trying to refactor in a way that doesn't involve too much immediate tech debt, remains robust and maintainable long-term. Thank you in advance!
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Feb ’26
The description of set_indices in the MSL reference seems incorrect.
I'm currently learning Metal. While reading the reference, I came across a strange description. Page 78 in Version 4 Reference (2025-10-25) says: It is legal to call the following set_indices functions to set the indices if the position in the index buffer is valid and if the position in the index buffer is a multiple of 2 (uchar2 overload) or 2 (uchar4 overload). The index I needs to be in the range [0, max_indices). void set_indices(uint I, uchar2 v); void set_indices(uint I, uchar4 v); However, it seems that the uchar4 overload should be multiple of 4. Furthermore, there is no explanation of what these methods actually do. I believe it involves setting two to four consecutive indices at once, but there is no mention of that here. I would like to know if the above understanding is correct.
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Feb ’26
Possible Bug - Hover Effects/Spatial Event Compatibilty with PSVR2 Controllers?
Hi, I would like clarification on whether the new hover effects feature introduced in vision os 26 supported pinch gestures through the psvr 2 controllers. In your sample application, I found that this was not working. Pulling the trigger on the controller whilst looking at the 3d object did not activate the hover effect spatial event in the sample application. (The object is showing the highlight though), only pinch clicking with my fingers seem to be registering/triggering the spatial event. I am using Vision OS 26.3 This is inconsistent with how the psvr2 controller behaves on swift ui views and ui view elements, where the trigger press does count as a button click. The sample I used was this one: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/compositorservices/rendering_hover_effects_in_metal_immersive_apps
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Mar ’26
Xcode Metal Capture crash when using MTLSamplerState
The sample code just draw a triangle and sample texture. both sample code can draw a correct triangle and sample texture as expected. there are no error message from terminal. Sample code using constexpr Sampler can capture and replay well. Sample code using a argumentTable to bind a MTLSamplerState was crashed when using Metal capture and replay on Xcode. Here are sample codes. Sample Code Test Environment: M1 Pro MacOS 26.3 (25D125) Xcode Version 26.2 (17C52) Feedback ID: FB22031701
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Apr ’26
Trouble creating an XPC service for out-of-process rendering
I'm working on an editor for Bevy games and wanted the following workflow: Launch the game process Host a Metal view for the game's render target Use an XPC service to transfer an MTLSharedTextureHandle Keep the connection for editor/game communication and hot reload As such I created the following editor service: public let XPCEditorServiceName = "org.bevy.editor" public enum XPCEditorMessage: Codable { case ping } public enum XPCEditorReply: Codable { case pong } extension XPCListener { static let bevy = try! XPCListener(service: XPCEditorServiceName) { request in request.accept(XPCEditorService.init) } } struct XPCEditorService: XPCPeerHandler { let session: XPCSession private func handle(_ message: XPCEditorMessage) -> XPCEditorReply? { switch message { case .ping: return .pong } } func handleIncomingRequest(_ message: XPCReceivedMessage) -> (any Encodable)? { do { return handle(try message.decode()) } catch { return nil } } func handleCancellation(error: XPCRichError) { print(error) } } and I initialize it in my app's App initializer: // Launch the XPC service print(XPCListener.bevy) I wanted to test this using an executable target with the following main.swift: let session = try XPCSession(xpcService: XPCEditorServiceName) let response: XPCEditorReply = try session.sendSync(XPCEditorMessage.ping) print("Connected to editor!") The editor prints Listener<org.bevy.editor>(Active) but the game fails with Underlying connection was invalidated. Reason: Connection init failed at lookup with error 3 - No such process What am I doing wrong? PS. Would also appreciate an example of sending & rendering the MTLSharedTextureHandle both in editor & game.
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Feb ’26
Using Metal compute for scientific simulation (lattice QCD gauge theory)
I've been using Metal compute shaders for lattice quantum chromodynamics simulations and wanted to share the experience in case others are doing scientific computing on Metal. The workload involves SU(2) matrix operations on 4D lattice grids — lots of 2x2 and 3x3 complex matrix multiplies, reductions over lattice sites, and nearest-neighbor stencil operations. The implementation bridges a C++ scientific framework (Grid) to Metal via Objective-C++ .mm files, with MSL kernels compiled into .metallib archives during the build. Things that work well: Shared memory on M-series eliminates the CPU↔GPU copy overhead that dominates in CUDA workflows The .metallib compilation integrates cleanly with autotools builds using xcrun Float4 packing for SU(2) matrices maps naturally to MSL vector types Things I'm still figuring out: Optimal threadgroup sizes for stencil operations on 4D grids Whether to use MTLHeap for gauge field storage or stick with individual buffers Best practices for double precision — some measurements need float64 but Metal's double support varies by hardware The application is measuring chromofield flux distributions between static quarks, ultimately targeting multi-quark systems. Production runs are on MacBook Pro M-series and Mac Studio. Code: https://github.com/ThinkOffApp/multiquark-lattice-qcd
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Feb ’26
Hover effects w/ Compositor Services w/ PSVR2 controllers
Hi, I would like clarification on whether the new hover effects feature introduced in vision os 26 supported pinch gestures through the psvr 2 controllers. In your sample application, I was not able to confirm that this was working. Only pinch clicking with my hands worked. Pulling the trigger on the controller whilst looking at a 3d object did not activate the hover effect spatial event in the sample application. (The object is showing the highlight though) This is inconsistent with hover effect behavior with psvr2 controllers on swift ui views, where the trigger press does count as a button click. The sample I used was this one: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/compositorservices/rendering_hover_effects_in_metal_immersive_apps
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488
Activity
Jan ’26
Why there's no rgb32Float in Metal?
I noticed that MTLPixelFormat has this cases: case r32Float = 55 case rg32Float = 105 case rgba32Float = 125 But no case rgb32Float. What's the reason for such a discrimination?
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318
Activity
Jan ’26
Metal debug log in Swift Package
My goal is to print a debug message from a shader. I follow the guide that orders to set -fmetal-enable-logging metal compiler flag and following environment variables: MTL_LOG_LEVEL=MTLLogLevelDebug MTL_LOG_BUFFER_SIZE=2048 MTL_LOG_TO_STDERR=1 However there's an issue with the guide, it's only covers Xcode project setup, however I'm working on a Swift Package. It has a Metal-only target that's included into main target like this: targets: [ // A separate target for shaders. .target( name: "MetalShaders", resources: [ .process("Metal") ], plugins: [ // https://github.com/schwa/MetalCompilerPlugin .plugin(name: "MetalCompilerPlugin", package: "MetalCompilerPlugin") ] ), // Main target .target( name: "MegApp", dependencies: ["MetalShaders"] ), .testTarget( name: "MegAppTests", dependencies: [ "MegApp", "MetalShaders", ] ] So to apply compiler flag I use MetalCompilerPlugin which emits debug.metallib, it also allows to define DEBUG macro for shaders. This code compiles: #ifdef DEBUG logger.log_error("Hello There!"); os_log_default.log_debug("Hello thread: %d", gid); // this proves that code exectutes result.flag = true; #endif Environment is set via .xctestplan and valideted to work with ProcessInfo. However, nothing is printed to Xcode console nor to Console app. In attempt to fix it I'm trying to setup a MTLLogState, however the makeLogState(descriptor:) fails with error: if #available(iOS 18.0, *) { let logDescriptor = MTLLogStateDescriptor() logDescriptor.level = .debug logDescriptor.bufferSize = 2048 // Error Domain=MTLLogStateErrorDomain Code=2 "Cannot create residency set for MTLLogState: (null)" UserInfo={NSLocalizedDescription=Cannot create residency set for MTLLogState: (null)} let logState = try! device.makeLogState(descriptor: logDescriptor) commandBufferDescriptor.logState = logState } Some LLMs suggested that this is connected with Simulator, and truly, I run the tests on simulator. However tests don't want to run on iPhone... I found solution running them on My Mac (Mac Catalyst). Surprisingly descriptor log works there, even without MTLLogState. But the Simulator behaviour seems like a bug...
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828
Activity
Jan ’26
# [CRITICAL] Metal RHI Memory Leak - Resource exhaustion vulnerability (CWE-400) - Bug Report
[CRITICAL] Metal API Memory Leak - Heap Memory Never Released to OS (CWE-400) Security Classification This issue constitutes a resource exhaustion vulnerability (CWE-400): Aspect Details Type Uncontrolled Resource Consumption CWE CWE-400 Vector Local (any Metal application) Impact System instability, denial of service User Control None - no mitigation available Recovery Requires application restart Summary Metal heap allocations are never released back to macOS, even when the memory is entirely unused. This causes continuous, unbounded memory growth until system instability or crash. The issue affects any application using Metal API heap allocation. This was discovered in Unreal Engine 5, but reproduces in a completely blank UE5 project with zero application code - confirming this is Metal framework behavior, not application-level. Environment OS: macOS Tahoe 26.2 Hardware: Apple Silicon M4 Max (also reproduced on M1, M2, M3) API: Metal Reproduction Steps Run any Metal application that allocates and deallocates GPU buffers via Metal heaps Open Activity Monitor and observe the application's memory usage Let the application run idle (no user interaction required) Observe memory growing continuously at ~1-2 MB per second Memory never plateaus or stabilizes Eventually system becomes unstable For testing: Any Unreal Engine 5.4+ project on macOS will reproduce this. Even a blank project with no gameplay code exhibits the leak. (Tested on UE 5.7.1) Observed Behavior Memory Analysis Using Unreal's memreport -full command, two reports taken 86 seconds apart: Metric Report 1 (183s) Report 2 (269s) Delta Process Physical 4373.64 MB 4463.39 MB +89.75 MB Metal Heap Buffer 7168 MB 8192 MB +1024 MB Unused Heap 3453 MB 4477 MB +1024 MB Object Count 73,840 73,840 0 (no change) Key Finding Metal Heap grew by exactly 1 GB while "Unused Heap" also grew by 1 GB. This demonstrates: Metal is allocating new heap blocks in ~1 GB increments Previously allocated heap memory becomes "unused" but is never released The unused memory accumulates indefinitely No application-level objects are leaking (count remains constant) Memory Growth Pattern Continuous growth while idle (no user interaction) Growth rate: approximately 1-2 MB per second No plateau or stabilization occurs Metal allocates new 1 GB heap blocks rather than reusing freed space Eventually leads to system instability and crash What is NOT Causing This We verified the following are NOT the source: Application objects - Object count remains constant Application code - Blank project with no code reproduces the issue Texture streaming - Disabling texture streaming had no effect CPU garbage collection - Running GC has no effect (this is GPU memory) Mitigations Attempted (None Worked) setPurgeableState Setting resources to purgeable state before release: [buffer setPurgeableState:MTLPurgeableStateEmpty]; Result: Metal ignores this hint and does not reclaim heap memory. Avoiding Heap Pooling Forcing individual buffer allocations instead of heap-based pooling. Result: Leak persists - Metal still manages underlying allocations. Aggressive Buffer Compaction Attempting to compact/defragment buffers within heaps every frame. Result: Only moves data between existing heaps. Does NOT release heaps back to OS. Reducing Pool Sizes Minimizing all buffer pool sizes to force more frequent reuse. Result: Slightly slows the leak rate but does not stop it. Root Cause Analysis How Metal Heap Allocation Appears to Work Metal allocates GPU heap blocks in large chunks (~1 GB observed) Application requests buffers from these heaps When application releases buffers, memory becomes "unused" within the heap Metal does NOT release heap blocks back to macOS, even when entirely unused When fragmentation prevents reuse, Metal allocates new heap blocks Result: Continuous memory growth with no upper bound The Core Problem There appears to be no Metal API to force heap memory release. The only way to reclaim this memory is to destroy the Metal device entirely, which requires restarting the application. Expected Behavior Metal should: Release unused heaps - When a heap block is entirely unused, release it back to macOS Respect purgeable hints - Honor setPurgeableState calls from applications Compact allocations - Defragment heap allocations to reduce fragmentation Provide control APIs - Allow applications to request heap compaction or release Enforce limits - Have configurable maximum heap memory consumption Security Implications Local Denial of Service - Any Metal application can exhaust system memory, causing instability affecting all running applications Memory Pressure Attack - Forces other applications to swap to disk, degrading system-wide performance No Upper Bound - Memory consumption continues until system failure Unmitigable - End users have no way to prevent or limit the leak Affects All Metal Apps - Any application using Metal heaps is potentially affected Impact Applications become unstable after extended use System-wide performance degrades as memory pressure increases Users must periodically restart applications Developers cannot work around this at the application level Long-running applications (games, creative tools, servers) are particularly affected Request Investigate Metal heap memory management behavior Implement heap release when blocks become entirely unused Honor setPurgeableState hints from applications Consider providing an API for applications to request heap compaction Document any intended behavior or workarounds Additional Notes This issue has been observed across multiple Unreal Engine versions (5.4, 5.7) and multiple Apple Silicon generations (M1 through M4). The behavior is consistent and reproducible. The Unreal Engine team has implemented various CVars to attempt mitigation (rhi.Metal.HeapBufferBytesToCompact, rhi.Metal.ResourcePurgeInPool, etc.) but none successfully address the issue because the root cause is at the Metal framework level. Tested: January 2026 Platform: macOS Tahoe 26.2, Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3/M4)
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Jan ’26
'__abort_with_payload' from CompositorNonUI on visionOS 26.2 (device + simulator, Omniverse streaming)
I am developing a custom app for Apple Vision Pro using Compositor Services to stream content from NVIDIA Omniverse. The app is based on: https://github.com/NVIDIA-Omniverse/apple-configurator-sample Environment: Device: Apple Vision Pro OS Version: visionOS 26.2 Xcode Version: 26.2 The Issue: The application crashes hard (__abort_with_payload) in "libsystem_kernel.dylib" on Task 6 immediately after initialization. This appears to be a deliberate abort triggered by the compositor, not a typical crash. The issue occurs on both physical device and simulator. Important detail: The console output shows a specific CLIENT BUG assertion. By checking the metadata of the warning, I found that it is related to "Library: CompositorNonUI". Relevant console output before abort: Missed 'FrameLimiter' target of 90.0 Hz running compositor services to get IPD, FOV, etc fence tx observer 14f27 timed out after 0.600000 fence tx observer bc1b timed out after 0.600000 BUG IN CLIENT: For mixed reality experiences please use cp_drawable_compute_projection API
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Jan ’26
SpriteKit Offline Rendering with SKRenderer
Hi! I'd like to share a technical sample app, SKRenderer Demo. This app demonstrates: Setting up SKRenderer Recording SpriteKit scenes to image sequences Recording SpriteKit scenes to video using IOSurface and AVFoundation Applying Core Image filters Exploring SpriteKit's simulation timing and physics determinism Use Case Record SpriteKit simulations as video or images for sharing and creating content. I explored several approaches, including the excellent view.texture(from:crop:) for live recording from SKView. The SKRenderer approach assumes recording happens asynchronously: you capture user interactions as commands during live interaction, then replay those commands through an offline render pass to generate the final output. I hope this helps others working on replay systems, simulation capture, or SpriteKit projects in general!
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Jan ’26
Linker trying to link Metal toolchain for every object file on Catalyst
When building our project for Mac Catalyst with Xcode 26.2, we get this warning almost a hundred times, once for every object file: directory not found for option '-L/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst' Somehow, every Link <FileName>.o build step got the following parameter, regardless if the target contained Metal files or not: -L/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst The toolchain is mounted at this point, but the directory usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst doesn't exist. When building the project for iOS, the option doesn't exist and the warning is not shown. We already check the build settings, but we couldn't find a reason why the linker is trying to link against the toolchain here. Even for targets that do contain Metal files, we get the following linker warning: search path '/var/run/com.apple.security.cryptexd/mnt/com.apple.MobileAsset.MetalToolchain-v17.3.48.0.UZtKea/Metal.xctoolchain/usr/lib/swift/maccatalyst' not found Is this a known issue? Is there a way to get rid of these warnings?
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Mar ’26
Metal 4: Proper usage of requestResidency() with unique per-frame textures at 120fps
Hello, I have some confusion regarding ResidencySet. Specifically, about the requestResidency() function: how often should we call it? I have a captureOutput(_:didOutput:from:) method that is triggered at 60 or 120 fps. Inside this method, I am calling the following code every frame: computeResidencySet.removeAllAllocations() сomputeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureA) computeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureB) computeResidencySet.addAllocation(TextureC) computeResidencySet.commit() computeResidencySet.requestResidency() // Should we call it every frame? Please keep in mind that TextureA, TextureB, and TextureC are unique for each call (new instances are provided on every frame)."
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Jan ’26
Xcode Metal Trace
Code is download from apple official metal4 sample [https://developer.apple.com/documentation/metal/drawing-a-triangle-with-metal-4?language=objc] enable metal gpu trace in macOS schema and trace a frame in Xcode. Xcode may show segment fault on App from some 'GTTrace' function when click trace button. When replay a .gputrace file, Xcode may crash , throw an internal error or a XPC error. The example code using old metal-renderer can trace without any problem and everything works fine. Test Environment: Xcode Version 26.2 (17C52) macOS 26.2 (25C56) M1 Pro 16GB A2442
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Jan ’26
Optimizing HZB Mip-Chain Generation and Bindless Argument Tables in a Custom Metal Engine
Hi everyone, I’ve been developing a custom, end-to-end 3D rendering engine called Crescent from scratch using C++20 and Metal-cpp (targeting macOS and visionOS). My primary goal is to build a zero-bottleneck, GPU-driven pipeline that maximizes the potential of Apple Silicon’s Unified Memory and TBDR architecture. While the fundamental systems are stable, I am looking for architectural feedback from Metal framework engineers regarding specific synchronization and latency challenges. Current Core Implementations: GPU-Driven Instance Culling: High-performance occlusion culling using a Hierarchical Z-Buffer (HZB) approach via Compute Shaders. Clustered Forward Shading: Support for high-count dynamic lights through view-space clustering. Temporal Stability: Custom TAA with history rejection and Motion Blur resolve. Asset Infrastructure: Robust GUID-based scene serialization and a JSON-driven ECS hierarchy. The Architectural Challenge: I am currently seeing slight synchronization overhead when generating the HZB mip-chain. On Apple Silicon, I am evaluating the cost of encoder transitions versus cache-friendly barriers. && m_hzbInitPipeline && m_hzbDownsamplePipeline && !m_hzbMipViews.empty(); if (canBuildHzb) { MTL::ComputeCommandEncoder* hzbInit = commandBuffer->computeCommandEncoder(); hzbInit->setComputePipelineState(m_hzbInitPipeline); hzbInit->setTexture(m_depthTexture, 0); hzbInit->setTexture(m_hzbMipViews[0], 1); if (m_pointClampSampler) { hzbInit->setSamplerState(m_pointClampSampler, 0); } else if (m_linearClampSampler) { hzbInit->setSamplerState(m_linearClampSampler, 0); } const uint32_t hzbWidth = m_hzbMipViews[0]->width(); const uint32_t hzbHeight = m_hzbMipViews[0]->height(); const uint32_t threads = 8; MTL::Size tgSize = MTL::Size(threads, threads, 1); MTL::Size gridSize = MTL::Size((hzbWidth + threads - 1) / threads * threads, (hzbHeight + threads - 1) / threads * threads, 1); hzbInit->dispatchThreads(gridSize, tgSize); hzbInit->endEncoding(); for (size_t mip = 1; mip < m_hzbMipViews.size(); ++mip) { MTL::Texture* src = m_hzbMipViews[mip - 1]; MTL::Texture* dst = m_hzbMipViews[mip]; if (!src || !dst) { continue; } MTL::ComputeCommandEncoder* downEncoder = commandBuffer->computeCommandEncoder(); downEncoder->setComputePipelineState(m_hzbDownsamplePipeline); downEncoder->setTexture(src, 0); downEncoder->setTexture(dst, 1); const uint32_t mipWidth = dst->width(); const uint32_t mipHeight = dst->height(); MTL::Size downGrid = MTL::Size((mipWidth + threads - 1) / threads * threads, (mipHeight + threads - 1) / threads * threads, 1); downEncoder->dispatchThreads(downGrid, tgSize); downEncoder->endEncoding(); } if (m_instanceCullHzbPipeline) { dispatchInstanceCulling(m_instanceCullHzbPipeline, true); } } My Questions: Encoder Synchronization: Would you recommend moving this loop into a single ComputeCommandEncoder using MTLBarrier between dispatches to maintain L2 cache residency, or is the overhead of separate encoders negligible for depth-downsampling on TBDR? visionOS Bindless Latency: For stereo rendering on visionOS, what are the best practices for managing MTL4ArgumentTable updates at 90Hz+? I want to ensure that updating bindless resources for each eye doesn't introduce unnecessary CPU-to-GPU latency. Memory Management: Are there specific hints for Memoryless textures that could be applied to intermediate HZB levels to save bandwidth during this process? I’ve attached a screenshot of a scene rendered with the engine (PBR, SSR, and IBL).
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Feb ’26
Metal Toolchain Not Installing
I’m attempting to install the Metal toolchain in Xcode, but the installation keeps hanging. Through Xcode, it stops at the “Processing” step, and via the terminal, it never goes past “Beginning asset download…”.
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Feb ’26
Open Shading Language (OSL) in Metal
Hi. I'm a 3D designer, using Blender for most of my work. The most recent Blender conference discussed utilizing the Open Shading Language (OSL) in their latest versions, which allows designers to write custom shaders for their workflows. At the moment, only Nvidia Optix GPU's can utilize this language for rendering (from what I understand), but Blender developers stated they are waiting on other GPU manufacturers to implement this feature as well. I'm not sure if there are any licensing issues here, but would this be something Apple could implement in Metal to make their hardware more attractive to the 3D design community? Any help or knowledge on this topic would be greatly appreciated.
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Feb ’26
Unable to find intelgpu_kbl_gt2r0 slice or a compatible one in binary archive
Unable to find intelgpu_kbl_gt2r0 slice or a compatible one in binary archive 'file:///System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/IconRendering.framework/Resources/binary.metallib' available slices: applegpu_g13g, applegpu_g13s, applegpu_g13d, applegpu_g14g, applegpu_g14s, applegpu_g14d, applegpu_g15g, applegpu_g15s, applegpu_g15d, applegpu_g16g, applegpu_g16s, applegpu_g17g, applegpu_g15g, applegpu_g15s, applegpu_g15d, applegpu_g16s Is it related to performance of applications in macOS 26.2 on Intel Macs?
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Feb ’26
Can a Swift Student Challenge submission include .metal shader files ?
Hello developers, i have a project for SSC that includes metal shader code. The project runs fine when I build and run it in Xcode, but it does not run in the Swift Playground app. The reason is that Swift Playgrounds doesn’t compile/build source files with the .metal extension the same way Xcode does (so the shader never gets built/loaded in Playgrounds). The requirements say: “Your app playground must be built with and run on Swift Playgrounds 4.6 or Xcode 26, or later.” Since it says “or” (not “and”), does that mean it’s acceptable if the project only builds/runs in Xcode?
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Feb ’26
Core Image for depth maps & segmentation masks: numeric fidelity issues when rendering CIImage to CVPixelBuffer (looking for Architecture suggestions)
Hello All, I’m working on a computer-vision–heavy iOS application that uses the camera, LiDAR depth maps, and semantic segmentation to reason about the environment (object identification, localization and measurement - not just visualization). Current architecture I initially built the image pipeline around CIImage as a unifying abstraction. It seemed like a good idea because: CIImage integrates cleanly with Vision, ARKit, AVFoundation, Metal, Core Graphics, etc. It provides a rich set of out-of-the-box transforms and filters. It is immutable and thread-safe, which significantly simplified concurrency in a multi-queue pipeline. The LiDAR depth maps, semantic segmentation masks, etc. were treated as CIImages, with conversion to CVPixelBuffer or MTLTexture only at the edges when required. Problem I’ve run into cases where Core Image transformations do not preserve numeric fidelity for non-visual data. Example: Rendering a CIImage-backed segmentation mask into a larger CVPixelBuffer can cause label values to change in predictable but incorrect ways. This occurs even when: using nearest-neighbor sampling disabling color management (workingColorSpace / outputColorSpace = NSNull) applying identity or simple affine transforms I’ve confirmed via controlled tests that: Metal → CVPixelBuffer paths preserve values correctly CIImage → CVPixelBuffer paths can introduce value changes when resampling or expanding the render target This makes CIImage unsafe as a source of numeric truth for segmentation masks and depth-based logic, even though it works well for visualization, and I should have realized this much sooner. Direction I’m considering I’m now considering refactoring toward more intent-based abstractions instead of a single image type, for example: Visual images: CIImage (camera frames, overlays, debugging, UI) Scalar fields: depth / confidence maps backed by CVPixelBuffer + Metal Label maps: segmentation masks backed by integer-preserving buffers (no interpolation, no transforms) In this model, CIImage would still be used extensively — but primarily for visualization and perceptual processing, not as the container for numerically sensitive data. Thread safety concern One of the original advantages of CIImage was that it is thread-safe by design, and that was my biggest incentive. For CVPixelBuffer / MTLTexture–backed data, I’m considering enforcing thread safety explicitly via: Swift Concurrency (actor-owned data, explicit ownership) Questions For those may have experience with CV / AR / imaging-heavy iOS apps, I was hoping to know the following: Is this separation of image intent (visual vs numeric vs categorical) a reasonable architectural direction? Do you generally keep CIImage at the heart of your pipeline, or push it to the edges (visualization only)? How do you manage thread safety and ownership when working heavily with CVPixelBuffer and Metal? Using actor-based abstractions, GCD, or adhoc? Are there any best practices or gotchas around using Core Image with depth maps or segmentation masks that I should be aware of? I’d really appreciate any guidance or experience-based advice. I suspect I’ve hit a boundary of Core Image’s design, and I’m trying to refactor in a way that doesn't involve too much immediate tech debt, remains robust and maintainable long-term. Thank you in advance!
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Feb ’26
The description of set_indices in the MSL reference seems incorrect.
I'm currently learning Metal. While reading the reference, I came across a strange description. Page 78 in Version 4 Reference (2025-10-25) says: It is legal to call the following set_indices functions to set the indices if the position in the index buffer is valid and if the position in the index buffer is a multiple of 2 (uchar2 overload) or 2 (uchar4 overload). The index I needs to be in the range [0, max_indices). void set_indices(uint I, uchar2 v); void set_indices(uint I, uchar4 v); However, it seems that the uchar4 overload should be multiple of 4. Furthermore, there is no explanation of what these methods actually do. I believe it involves setting two to four consecutive indices at once, but there is no mention of that here. I would like to know if the above understanding is correct.
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Feb ’26
Possible Bug - Hover Effects/Spatial Event Compatibilty with PSVR2 Controllers?
Hi, I would like clarification on whether the new hover effects feature introduced in vision os 26 supported pinch gestures through the psvr 2 controllers. In your sample application, I found that this was not working. Pulling the trigger on the controller whilst looking at the 3d object did not activate the hover effect spatial event in the sample application. (The object is showing the highlight though), only pinch clicking with my fingers seem to be registering/triggering the spatial event. I am using Vision OS 26.3 This is inconsistent with how the psvr2 controller behaves on swift ui views and ui view elements, where the trigger press does count as a button click. The sample I used was this one: https://developer.apple.com/documentation/compositorservices/rendering_hover_effects_in_metal_immersive_apps
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Mar ’26
Xcode Metal Capture crash when using MTLSamplerState
The sample code just draw a triangle and sample texture. both sample code can draw a correct triangle and sample texture as expected. there are no error message from terminal. Sample code using constexpr Sampler can capture and replay well. Sample code using a argumentTable to bind a MTLSamplerState was crashed when using Metal capture and replay on Xcode. Here are sample codes. Sample Code Test Environment: M1 Pro MacOS 26.3 (25D125) Xcode Version 26.2 (17C52) Feedback ID: FB22031701
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Apr ’26
Trouble creating an XPC service for out-of-process rendering
I'm working on an editor for Bevy games and wanted the following workflow: Launch the game process Host a Metal view for the game's render target Use an XPC service to transfer an MTLSharedTextureHandle Keep the connection for editor/game communication and hot reload As such I created the following editor service: public let XPCEditorServiceName = "org.bevy.editor" public enum XPCEditorMessage: Codable { case ping } public enum XPCEditorReply: Codable { case pong } extension XPCListener { static let bevy = try! XPCListener(service: XPCEditorServiceName) { request in request.accept(XPCEditorService.init) } } struct XPCEditorService: XPCPeerHandler { let session: XPCSession private func handle(_ message: XPCEditorMessage) -> XPCEditorReply? { switch message { case .ping: return .pong } } func handleIncomingRequest(_ message: XPCReceivedMessage) -> (any Encodable)? { do { return handle(try message.decode()) } catch { return nil } } func handleCancellation(error: XPCRichError) { print(error) } } and I initialize it in my app's App initializer: // Launch the XPC service print(XPCListener.bevy) I wanted to test this using an executable target with the following main.swift: let session = try XPCSession(xpcService: XPCEditorServiceName) let response: XPCEditorReply = try session.sendSync(XPCEditorMessage.ping) print("Connected to editor!") The editor prints Listener<org.bevy.editor>(Active) but the game fails with Underlying connection was invalidated. Reason: Connection init failed at lookup with error 3 - No such process What am I doing wrong? PS. Would also appreciate an example of sending & rendering the MTLSharedTextureHandle both in editor & game.
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Feb ’26
Using Metal compute for scientific simulation (lattice QCD gauge theory)
I've been using Metal compute shaders for lattice quantum chromodynamics simulations and wanted to share the experience in case others are doing scientific computing on Metal. The workload involves SU(2) matrix operations on 4D lattice grids — lots of 2x2 and 3x3 complex matrix multiplies, reductions over lattice sites, and nearest-neighbor stencil operations. The implementation bridges a C++ scientific framework (Grid) to Metal via Objective-C++ .mm files, with MSL kernels compiled into .metallib archives during the build. Things that work well: Shared memory on M-series eliminates the CPU↔GPU copy overhead that dominates in CUDA workflows The .metallib compilation integrates cleanly with autotools builds using xcrun Float4 packing for SU(2) matrices maps naturally to MSL vector types Things I'm still figuring out: Optimal threadgroup sizes for stencil operations on 4D grids Whether to use MTLHeap for gauge field storage or stick with individual buffers Best practices for double precision — some measurements need float64 but Metal's double support varies by hardware The application is measuring chromofield flux distributions between static quarks, ultimately targeting multi-quark systems. Production runs are on MacBook Pro M-series and Mac Studio. Code: https://github.com/ThinkOffApp/multiquark-lattice-qcd
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Feb ’26