This is a fork of the online cache of the Device Parameter Database (DPDB) for the webvr-polyfill.
You'll need to update dpdb-formatted.json
with your device's information in the following format:
{
"devices": [
{
"type": "android",
"rules": [
{
"mdmh": "asus/*/ASUS_Z00AD/*"
},
{
"ua": "ASUS_Z00AD"
}
],
"dpi": [
403,
404.6
],
"bw": 3,
"ac": 1000
}
]
}
type
: Either"android"
or"ios"
.rules
: An array of various rules that must be satisfied in order to use the configuration. See the Rules section below.dpi
: The DPI of the device's screen, either as a scalar value or as an array of X and Y DPI. Get this information via the Device Info App and look forActual DPI X
andActual DPI Y
values.bw
: The bezel width in millimeters, with many phones having between 3 or 4mm bezel widths. See the Calculating Bezel Width section below.ac
: The accuracy of this entry. This is not currently used in webvr-polyfill, but may in the future, and used to settle discrepencies between device reported information versus DPDB data, although this is more for Android apps that have may potentially have access to both API reporting and DPDB results. Can be one of the following values:0
: measurements are speculative. Use as fallback only.500
: measurements are based on the device's self-reported values, which is often inaccurate. Unless you're physically measuring a device, this is probably the value to use.1000
: measurements are based on measuring a physical device.
The rules
entry is an array of objects, each with one key/value pair, and matches if any of the rules match the device.
The ua
rule is matched with the device's User-Agent string. It is not a regular expression, but just a simple substring match. Go to useragentstring.com and find something unique that looks like the device's name. Use this if device type is "android"
. Keep in mind of other models, where a string for the Nexus 5 could match the Nexus 5X, hence a string like "Nexus 5 "
(note the extra space).
{ "ua": "ASUS_Z00AD" }
The mdmh
rule matches a device based on manufacturer, device, model, and hardware, as reported by the device's Android API. This rule is only applicable to Android devices running native apps, not the web.
{ "mdmh": "asus/*/ASUS_Z00AD/*" }
The res
rule matches a device based on its exact pixel resolution. This should normally only be used on iOS devices because there's a 1:1 mapping between exact resolution and phone model.
{ "res": [640, 960] }
You can calculate the exact bezel width using this formula, where deviceWidth
is in millimeters, screen
is the screen's diagonal length in millimeters, and ratio
is the screen resolution's width / height
:
(deviceWidth - Math.sqrt((screen * screen) / (1 + (1 / (ratio * ratio))))) / 2;
To generate the dpdb.json
file from the dpdb-formatted.json
source file, run this npm script from the command line:
npm run build
Or call this Node script directly:
node scripts/build.js --write
The following devices were added (and/or corrections made):
- iPhone XR
- OnePlus 3, OnePlus 3T, OnePlus 6, OnePlus 6T, international variants of OnePlus 2 and OnePlus X
- Asus x008d, Asus x00pd
- Samsung Galaxy S9+
- Samsung Galaxy S10, variants
- Added format key to avoid 'unexpected format version' error (thanks to AdrienPoupa for spotting this oversight)
- Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
- iPhone 6S+
- Removed double entries for several iOS settings