We again bring you some of the highlights of the new developments in the past month. This is however not an exhaustive list of changes, which can be obtained from the commit logs in the GitHub repository.

Android developments

We’re happy to announce that the Android port has made great strides forward in the past weeks. Most importantly, there is now a complete Python interpreter added to the Panda3D app, so that Python applications can be run directly from the Android device. Many of the sample programs now run as well as they do on the desktop.

It is now even possible to compile Panda3D entirely on an Android device, using an app that provides a Linux-like terminal environment. One free and open-source example is termux, which provides a package manager that gives access to an impressive suite of software, including the compilers needed to compile Panda3D.

Furthermore, using a bash script that we provide, it is also possible to launch Panda3D from termux and pipe the output from the interpreter app back to the terminal, so that you can develop Panda apps on Android the same way as you would on the desktop.

Eventually, we intend to make it possible to use the new deploy-ng system to produce an Android package from any operating system, making it easy to deploy your application to both desktop and mobile platforms.

In a separate effort, a commercial port of Panda3D to Android has been released on the app store, called Cub3D. This is an impressively complete development environment for Panda3D apps, and can be used today to develop and run Panda apps on Android. (This software is developed by a third-party company that is not affiliated with the Panda3D team.)









CMake improvements

Behind the scenes, we have been working on adding support for the CMake build system on the cmake branch. CMake is a popular cross-platform build system that is rapidly becoming the de facto standard for open-source projects, and it is eventually intended to replace our own makepanda build script. This will make it easier to build Panda from source and to customize the build process. Last month, the CMake port saw some updates and improvements, bringing us closer to this goal.

Bullet thread safety

Users of the Bullet physics engine were previously encountering crashes when using Bullet in conjunction with the multithreaded render pipeline. This is caused by the fact that the Bullet library is not thread safe. To remedy this, we have added locking in the Panda3D wrapper for Bullet that protects the Bullet library from access by multiple threads, which makes it safe to use the Bullet integration in a multithreaded program.