WinRT in Unreal

Over the course of your HoloLens development you may need to write a feature using WinRT. For example, opening a file dialogue in a HoloLens application would need the FileSavePicker in winrt/Windows.Storage.Pickers.h header file. WinRT is supported in Unreal's build system from version 4.26 onwards.

The standard WinRT APIs

The most common and easiest way to use WinRT is to call methods from WinSDK. To do so, open YourModule.Build.cs file and add the following lines:

if (Target.Platform == UnrealTargetPlatform.Win64 || Target.Platform == UnrealTargetPlatform.HoloLens)
{
	// These parameters are mandatory for winrt support
	bEnableExceptions = true;
	bUseUnity = false;
	CppStandard = CppStandardVersion.Cpp17;
	PublicSystemLibraries.AddRange(new string[] { "shlwapi.lib", "runtimeobject.lib" });
	PrivateIncludePaths.Add(Path.Combine(Target.WindowsPlatform.WindowsSdkDir,        
                                        "Include", 
                                        Target.WindowsPlatform.WindowsSdkVersion, 
                                        "cppwinrt"));
}

Next, you need to add the following WinRT headers:

#if (PLATFORM_WINDOWS || PLATFORM_HOLOLENS) 
//Before writing any code, you need to disable common warnings in WinRT headers
#pragma warning(disable : 5205 4265 4268 4946)

#include "Windows/AllowWindowsPlatformTypes.h"
#include "Windows/AllowWindowsPlatformAtomics.h"
#include "Windows/PreWindowsApi.h"

#include <unknwn.h>
#include <winrt/Windows.Foundation.h>
#include <winrt/Windows.Perception.Spatial.h>
#include <winrt/Windows.Foundation.Collections.h>

#include "Windows/PostWindowsApi.h"
#include "Windows/HideWindowsPlatformAtomics.h"
#include "Windows/HideWindowsPlatformTypes.h"
#endif

WinRT code can only be compiled in the Win64 and HoloLens platforms, so the if statement prevents WinRT libraries from being included on other platforms. unknwn.h was added for having the IUnknown interface.

WinRT from a NuGet package

It’s a little more complicated if you need to add a NuGet package with WinRT support. In this case, Visual Studio can do practically all job for you, but the Unreal build system can’t. Luckily, it’s not too difficult. Below is an example of how you would go about downloading the Microsoft.MixedReality.QR package. You can replace it with another, just make sure you don’t lose the winmd file and copy the correct dll.

Windows SDK dlls from the previous section are handled by the OS. NuGet’s dlls must be managed by the code in your module. We recommend adding code to download them, copying into binaries folder, and load into the process memory at the module startup.

At the first step, you should add a packages.config (/nuget/reference/packages-config) into the root folder of your module. There you should add all packages you want to download, including all their dependencies. Here I added Microsoft.MixedReality.QR as a primary payload and two others as dependencies to it. The format of that file is same as in Visual Studio:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<packages>
  <package id="Microsoft.MixedReality.QR" version="0.5.2102" targetFramework="native" />
  <package id="Microsoft.VCRTForwarders.140" version="1.0.6" targetFramework="native" />
  <package id="Microsoft.Windows.CppWinRT" version="2.0.200729.8" targetFramework="native" />
</packages>

Now you can download the NuGet, the required packages, or refer to the NuGet documentation.

Open YourModule.Build.cs and add the following code:

// WinRT with Nuget support
if (Target.Platform == UnrealTargetPlatform.Win64 || Target.Platform == UnrealTargetPlatform.HoloLens)
{
	// these parameters mandatory for winrt support
	bEnableExceptions = true;
	bUseUnity = false;
	CppStandard = CppStandardVersion.Cpp17;
	PublicSystemLibraries.AddRange(new string [] { "shlwapi.lib", "runtimeobject.lib" });

	// prepare everything for nuget
	string MyModuleName = GetType().Name;
	string NugetFolder = Path.Combine(PluginDirectory, "Intermediate", "Nuget", MyModuleName);
	Directory.CreateDirectory(NugetFolder);

	string BinariesSubFolder = Path.Combine("Binaries", "ThirdParty", Target.Type.ToString(), Target.Platform.ToString(), Target.Architecture);

	PrivateDefinitions.Add(string.Format("THIRDPARTY_BINARY_SUBFOLDER=\"{0}\"", BinariesSubFolder.Replace(@"\", @"\\")));

	string BinariesFolder = Path.Combine(PluginDirectory, BinariesSubFolder);
	Directory.CreateDirectory(BinariesFolder);

	ExternalDependencies.Add("packages.config");

	// download nuget
	string NugetExe = Path.Combine(NugetFolder, "nuget.exe");
	if (!File.Exists(NugetExe))
	{
		using (System.Net.WebClient myWebClient = new System.Net.WebClient())
		{
			// we aren't focusing on a specific nuget version, we can use any of them but the latest one is preferable
			myWebClient.DownloadFile(@"https://dist.nuget.org/win-x86-commandline/latest/nuget.exe", NugetExe);
		}
	}

	// run nuget to update the packages
	{
		var StartInfo = new System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo(NugetExe, string.Format("install \"{0}\" -OutputDirectory \"{1}\"", Path.Combine(ModuleDirectory, "packages.config"), NugetFolder));
		StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
		StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
		var ExitCode = Utils.RunLocalProcessAndPrintfOutput(StartInfo);
		if (ExitCode < 0)
		{
			throw new BuildException("Failed to get nuget packages.  See log for details.");
		}
	}

	// get list of the installed packages, that's needed because the code should get particular versions of the installed packages
	string[] InstalledPackages = Utils.RunLocalProcessAndReturnStdOut(NugetExe, string.Format("list -Source \"{0}\"", NugetFolder)).Split(new char[] { '\r', '\n' });

	// winmd files of the packages
	List<string> WinMDFiles = new List<string>();

	// WinRT lib for some job
	string QRPackage = InstalledPackages.FirstOrDefault(x => x.StartsWith("Microsoft.MixedReality.QR"));
	if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(QRPackage))
	{
		string QRFolderName = QRPackage.Replace(" ", ".");

		// copying dll and winmd binaries to our local binaries folder
		// !!!!! please make sure that you use the path of file! Unreal can't do it for you !!!!!
		string WinMDFile = Path.Combine(NugetFolder, QRFolderName, @"lib\uap10.0.18362\Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.winmd");
		SafeCopy(WinMDFile, Path.Combine(BinariesFolder, "Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.winmd"));

		SafeCopy(Path.Combine(NugetFolder, QRFolderName, string.Format(@"runtimes\win10-{0}\native\Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.dll", Target.WindowsPlatform.Architecture.ToString())),
			Path.Combine(BinariesFolder, "Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.dll"));

		// also both both binaries must be in RuntimeDependencies, unless you get failures in Hololens platform
		RuntimeDependencies.Add(Path.Combine(BinariesFolder, "Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.dll"));
		RuntimeDependencies.Add(Path.Combine(BinariesFolder, "Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.winmd"));

		//add winmd file to the list for further processing using cppwinrt.exe
		WinMDFiles.Add(WinMDFile);
	}

	if (Target.Platform == UnrealTargetPlatform.Win64)
	{
		// Microsoft.VCRTForwarders.140 is needed to run WinRT dlls in Win64 platforms
		string VCRTForwardersPackage = InstalledPackages.FirstOrDefault(x => x.StartsWith("Microsoft.VCRTForwarders.140"));
		if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(VCRTForwardersPackage))
		{
			string VCRTForwardersName = VCRTForwardersPackage.Replace(" ", ".");
			foreach (var Dll in Directory.EnumerateFiles(Path.Combine(NugetFolder, VCRTForwardersName, "runtimes/win10-x64/native/release"), "*_app.dll"))
			{
				string newDll = Path.Combine(BinariesFolder, Path.GetFileName(Dll));
				SafeCopy(Dll, newDll);
				RuntimeDependencies.Add(newDll);
			}
		}
	}

	// get WinRT package 
	string CppWinRTPackage = InstalledPackages.FirstOrDefault(x => x.StartsWith("Microsoft.Windows.CppWinRT"));
	if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(CppWinRTPackage))
	{
		string CppWinRTName = CppWinRTPackage.Replace(" ", ".");
		string CppWinRTExe = Path.Combine(NugetFolder, CppWinRTName, "bin", "cppwinrt.exe");
		string CppWinRTFolder = Path.Combine(PluginDirectory, "Intermediate", CppWinRTName, MyModuleName);
		Directory.CreateDirectory(CppWinRTFolder);

		// all downloaded winmd file with WinSDK to be processed by cppwinrt.exe
		var WinMDFilesStringbuilder = new System.Text.StringBuilder();
		foreach (var winmd in WinMDFiles)
		{
			WinMDFilesStringbuilder.Append(" -input \"");
			WinMDFilesStringbuilder.Append(winmd);
			WinMDFilesStringbuilder.Append("\"");
		}

		// generate winrt headers and add them into include paths
		var StartInfo = new System.Diagnostics.ProcessStartInfo(CppWinRTExe, string.Format("{0} -input \"{1}\" -output \"{2}\"", WinMDFilesStringbuilder, Target.WindowsPlatform.WindowsSdkVersion, CppWinRTFolder));
		StartInfo.UseShellExecute = false;
		StartInfo.CreateNoWindow = true;
		var ExitCode = Utils.RunLocalProcessAndPrintfOutput(StartInfo);
		if (ExitCode < 0)
		{
			throw new BuildException("Failed to get generate WinRT headers.  See log for details.");
		}

		PrivateIncludePaths.Add(CppWinRTFolder);
	}
	else
	{
		// fall back to default WinSDK headers if no winrt package in our list
		PrivateIncludePaths.Add(Path.Combine(Target.WindowsPlatform.WindowsSdkDir, "Include", Target.WindowsPlatform.WindowsSdkVersion, "cppwinrt"));
	}
}

You'll need to define the SafeCopy method as follows:

private void SafeCopy(string source, string destination)
{
	if(!File.Exists(source))
	{
		Log.TraceError("Class {0} can't find {1} file for copying", this.GetType().Name, source);
		return;
	}

	try
	{
		File.Copy(source, destination, true);
	}
	catch(IOException ex)
	{
		Log.TraceWarning("Failed to copy {0} to {1} with exception: {2}", source, destination, ex.Message);
		if (!File.Exists(destination))
		{
			Log.TraceError("Destination file {0} does not exist", destination);
			return;
		}

		Log.TraceWarning("Destination file {0} already existed and is probably in use.  The old file will be used for the runtime dependency.  This may happen when packaging a Win64 exe from the editor.", destination);
	}
}

NuGet DLLs needs to load into your Win32 process memory manually; we recommend adding manual loading into the startup method of your module:

void StartupModule() override
{
#if PLATFORM_WINDOWS
	const FString LibrariesDir = FPaths::ProjectPluginsDir() / "MyModule" / THIRDPARTY_BINARY_SUBFOLDER;
	FPlatformProcess::PushDllDirectory(*LibrariesDir);

	const FString DllName = "Microsoft.MixedReality.QR.dll";
	if (!FPlatformProcess::GetDllHandle(*DllName))
	{
		UE_LOG(LogHMD, Warning, TEXT("Dll \'%s\' can't be loaded from \'%s\'"), *DllName, *LibrariesDir);
	}

	FPlatformProcess::PopDllDirectory(*LibrariesDir);
#endif
}

Finally, you can include WinRT headers into your code as described in the previous section.

Next Development Checkpoint

If you're following the Unreal development journey we've laid out, you're in the midst of exploring the Mixed Reality platform capabilities and APIs. From here, you can continue to any topic or jump directly to deploying your app on a device or emulator.

See also