I have OpenGL code using one VAO for all model data and two VBOs. The first for standard vertex attributes like position and normal and the second for the model matrices. I am using instanced draw, so I load the model matrices as instanced arrays (which are basically vertex attributes).
First I load the standard vertex attributes to a VBO and setup everything once with glVertexAttribPointer. Then I load the model matrices to another VBO. Now I have to call glVertexAttribPointerin the draw loop. Can I somehow prevent this?
The code looks like this:
// vertex data of all models in one array
GLfloat myvertexdata[myvertexdatasize];
// matrix data of all models in one array
// (one model can have multiple matrices)
GLfloat mymatrixdata[mymatrixsize];
GLuint vao;
glGenVertexArrays(1, &vao);
glBindVertexArray(vao);
GLuint vbo;
glGenBuffers(1, &vbo);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, vbo);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, myvertexdatasize*sizeof(GLfloat), myvertexdata, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glVertexAttribPointer(
glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "position"),
3,
GL_FLOAT,
GL_FALSE,
24,
(GLvoid*)0
);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "position"));
glVertexAttribPointer(
glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "normal"),
3,
GL_FLOAT,
GL_FALSE,
24,
(GLvoid*)12
);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "normal"));
GLuint matrixbuffer;
glGenBuffers(1, &matrixbuffer);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, matrixbuffer);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mymatrixsize*sizeof(GLfloat), mymatrixdata, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glUseProgram(myprogram);
draw loop:
int vertices_offset = 0;
int matrices_offset = 0;
for each model i:
GLuint loc = glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "model_matrix_column_1");
GLsizei matrixbytes = 4*4*sizeof(GLfloat);
GLsizei columnbytes = 4*sizeof(GLfloat);
glVertexAttribPointer(
loc,
4,
GL_FLOAT,
GL_FALSE,
matrixbytes,
(GLvoid*) (matrices_offset*matrixbytes + 0*columnbytes)
);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(loc);
glVertexAttribDivisor(loc, 1); // matrices are in instanced array
// do this for the other 3 columns too...
glDrawArraysInstanced(GL_TRIANGLES, vertices_offset, models[i]->num_vertices(), models[i]->num_instances());
vertices_offset += models[i]->num_vertices();
matrices_offset += models[i]->num_matrices();
I thought of the approach of storing vertex data and matrices in one VBO. The problem is then how to set the strides correctly. I couldn't come up with a solution.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
If you have access to base-instance rendering (requires GL 4.2 or ARB_base_instance), then you could do this. Put the instanced attribute stuff in the setup with the non-instanced attribute stuff:
GLuint loc = glGetAttribLocation(myprogram, "model_matrix_column_1");
for(int count = 0; count < 4; ++count, ++loc)
{
GLsizei matrixbytes = 4*4*sizeof(GLfloat);
GLsizei columnbytes = 4*sizeof(GLfloat);
glVertexAttribPointer(
loc,
4,
GL_FLOAT,
GL_FALSE,
matrixbytes,
(GLvoid*) (count*columnbytes)
);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(loc);
glVertexAttribDivisor(loc, 1); // matrices are in instanced array
}
Then you just bind the VAO when you're ready to render these models. Your draw call becomes:
glDrawArraysInstancedBaseInstance​(GL_TRIANGLES, vertices_offset, models[i]->num_vertices(), models[i]->num_instances(), matrix_offset);
This feature is surprisingly widely available, even on pre-GL 4.x hardware (as long as it has recent drivers).
Without base instance rendering however, there's nothing you can do. You will have to adjust the instance pointers for each new set of instances you want to render. This is in fact why base instance rendering exists.
Related
I am trying to render multiple models sharing the same VAO and vertex format (following top answer on this post Render one VAO containing two VBOs), however I cannot get it to work with GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER nor can I find any resource/example to help me. Is it even possible to do that or does the element array buffer work in a way that is incompatible with glVertexAttribFormat/glBindVertexBuffer and sharing VAOs? or am I missing the ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER equivalent of glBindVertexBuffer?
My VAO is first created this way:
glCreateVertexArrays(1, &sharedVao);
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
glVertexAttribFormat(0, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0);
glVertexAttribBinding(0, 0);
// (just 1 for the example but there is more)
glBindVertexArray(0);
Then my model buffers are created as follow:
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao); // tried with and without binding vao first, no success
glCreateBuffers(1, &vbo);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, vbo);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, vertices.size() * sizeof(vertex), vertices.data(), GL_STATIC_DRAW);
// (just 1 for the example but there is more)
glCreateBuffers(1, &ebo);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, ebo);
glBufferData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, triangles.size() * sizeof(triangle), triangles.data(), GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glBindVertexArray(0);
And finally I render as follow:
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao);
for (auto const& model : models)
{
glBindVertexBuffer(0, model.vbo, sizeof(vertex));
// (just 1 for the example but there is more)
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, model.ebo);
// also tried glVertexArrayElementBuffer(sharedVao, model.ebo);
glDrawElements(GL_TRIANGLES, model.triangleCount * 3, GL_UNSIGNED_INT, nullptr);
}
Note that it does work if I start rendering the same VAO with glDrawArray (so without element array buffer).
This C++ GLSL Multiple IBO in VAO may be of valuable use, but still not sure what it means for sharing VAO formats for multiple models... (also realized that calling it IBO gives me more results than EBO...).
EDIT: this question was originally closed as supposedly a duplicate of Rendering meshes with multiple indices but it is not. Unlike this other question I am not talking about having different indices for different data (ex: indices for positions, indices for normals, indices for texture coords, etc.) but to have different indices per draw calls, while still using the same VAO format (the same way it is done with VBO and glBindVertexBuffer in Render one VAO containing two VBOs).
Multiple draw calls with shared Vertex Array Object
The purpose of this method is to avoid the cost of changing VAO format (see glVertexAttribPointer and glVertexAttribFormat: What's the difference? or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-bCeNzgiJ8I&t=1860) by sharing VAO and only rebinding buffers for every draw.
A clear example that doesn't make use of Element Buffer Array can be seen here: Render one VAO containing two VBOs
Create shared VAO (could be only once per program):
GLuint sharedVao = 0;
glCreateVertexArray(1, &sharedVao);
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
glVertexAttribFormat(0, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0);
// binding each attribute from its own buffer so attrib_index == buffer_index
glVertexAttribBinding(0, 0);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(1);
glVertexAttribFormat(1, 2, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0);
glVertexAttribBinding(1, 1);
Create mesh buffers (would be only once per mesh):
struct Mesh
{
GLuint m_ebo = 0;
std::array<GLuint, 2> m_vbos = 0;
GLuint m_triangleCount = 0;
};
// Binding shared VAO here is mandatory as operations accessing or modifying EBO's
// state are not guaranteed to succeed if it wasn't bound to a VAO.
// However, for every new model, binding the EBO will unbind the previous, and we
// will need to rebind EBO to shared VAO for every draw call.
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao);
glCreateBuffer(1, &mesh.m_ebo);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, mesh.m_ebo);
glBufferData(
GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER,
triangles.size() * sizeof(Triangle),
triangles.data(),
GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glBindVertexArray(0);
mesh.m_triangleCount = triangles.size();
glCreateBuffers(2, mesh.m_vbos.data());
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mesh.m_vbos[0]);
glBufferData(
GL_ARRAY_BUFFER,
positions.size() * sizeof(glm::vec3),
positions.data(),
GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mesh.m_vbos[1]);
glBufferData(
GL_ARRAY_BUFFER,
textureCoords.size() * sizeof(glm::vec2),
textureCoords.data(),
GL_STATIC_DRAW);
Render loop:
// Bind shared VAO only once
// If drawing with different set of vertex data bound, use glEnableVertexAttribArray
// or glDisableVertexAttribArray before draw calls
glBindVertexArray(sharedVao);
for (auto const& mesh : meshes)
{
glBindVertexBuffer(0, mesh.m_vbos[0], 0, sizeof(glm::vec3));
glBindVertexBuffer(1, mesh.m_vbos[1], 0, sizeof(glm::vec2));
// This is the key difference with existing example on sharing VAO:
// EBO must be rebound for every draw (unless 2 draws share the same primitive indices)
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, mesh.m_ebo);
glDrawElements(GL_TRIANGLES, mesh.m_triangleCount * 3, GL_UNSIGNED_INT, nullptr);
}
I'm confused on the concept of buffers. I understand the very basics with glBufferData and glBufferSubData. Using glBufferSubData before a render function in your main loop you can use a offset and size parameter to store multiple model objects in a vertex buffer and a index buffer. Then at render you bind the single vertex buffer and call glDrawElements with the correct offsets and sizes to render multiple objects.
Is this the case with glMapBuffer? Or am I suppose to call glMapBuffer to link vertex and index data at render, then draw?
GLuint vertexArrayId;
GLuint verticesBufferId;
GLuint indicesBufferId;
void setupBuffers() {
glGenVertexArrays(1, &vertexArrayId);
glBindVertexArray(vertexArrayId);
glGenBuffers(1, &verticesBufferId);
glGenBuffers(1, &indicesBufferId);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, verticesBufferId);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, VERTICES_SIZE, NULL, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
// glMapBuffer stuff here
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, indicesBufferId);
glBufferData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, INDICES_SIZE, NULL, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
// glMapBuffer stuff here
}
void render() {
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, verticesBufferId);
glVertexAttribPointer(0, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0, (void*)((sizeof(GLfloat) * 0)));
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
// glDrawElements stuff here
glDisableVertexAttribArray(0);
// Model, View, Projection transformations here
// glUniformMatrix4fv
}
You can use glMapBuffer to upload data from ram to the GPU:
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, verticesBufferId);
void *data = glMapBuffer( GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, ... );
// copy vertex data from instance
::memcpy( data, vertices, vertexSize );
...
glUnmapBuffer( ... );
For instance when you want to upload vertex- and index-data from a model. You can use the pointer returned from glMapBuffer like a raw-c-pointer ( just for convenience )
Keep in mind: glMapBuffer is not fast, so try to avoid using it during your render loop. After calling the glUnMap the data will be transfered to the GPU.
There are much better ways when you have to upload data from the CPU to the GPU periodically like using using Uniform-Blocks.
I found this blog-post, where the mapping is explained really well ( with all its drawbacks ): Mapping in OpenGL
I cannot figure out how to use an Indexed VBO, IMHO there's a lack of information about it (for example the lwjgl site in which the indexed vbo page is missing ATM).
The structure i'm using in my vertex buffer is {pos.x, pos.y pos.z}, {tex.u, tex.v tex.W} and {norm.x, norm.y norm.z}, my index buffer structure is {posIndex, texIndex, normIndex}
I'm reading all this data from an .obj file, if tex or norm is missing i set it to{-1,-1,-1}.
Here's the code part in which i send data to the GPUs buffers:
this.VBOSize = Vertices.size();
FloatBuffer vbo = BufferUtils.createFloatBuffer(this.VBOSize);
for (int i = 0; i < this.VBOSize; i++) {
vbo.put(Vertices.get(i));
}
vbo.flip();
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, VBOHandle);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, vbo, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
this.IBOSize = Indices.size();
IntBuffer ibo = BufferUtils.createIntBuffer(this.IBOSize);
for (int i = 0; i < this.IBOSize; i++) {
ibo.put(Indices.get(i));
}
ibo.flip();
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, IBOHandle);
glBufferData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, ibo, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0);
and here's how i [incorrectly] render it:
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(1);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(2);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, Object3D.getVBOHandle());
glVertexAttribPointer(0, 3, GL_FLOAT, true, 12, 0);//3 floats * 4 sizeof(float)
glVertexAttribPointer(1, 3, GL_FLOAT, true, 12, 13);
glVertexAttribPointer(2, 3, GL_FLOAT, true, 12, 25);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, Object3D.getIBOHandle());
glDrawElements(GL_TRIANGLES, Object3D.getIBOSize(), GL_UNSIGNED_INT, 0);
glDisableVertexAttribArray(0);
glDisableVertexAttribArray(1);
glDisableVertexAttribArray(2);
THis is not how opengl works. In openGL, a vertex is a set of attributes like position, normal, color, textcoord, whatever. Indexed rendering just references vertices. You cannot have different indices for the various attributes, but just one index for the whole set. If you have the situation where two vertices share their position, but, not the texcoords, they are entirely _different_ vertices, as far as the GL is concerned. You cannot directly use the data from lightwave .obj files but have to preprocess the data to generate the vertex arrays OpenGL can work this.
There is the GL_AMD_interleaved_elements extension which somewhat implements the feature you want to use. It still uses 32-Bit indices, but allowes one to split them into 2 16-Bit or 4 8-Bit indices to use different indices for different attributes, but this extension is far from being in core GL, isn't widely supported and is still very limited.
Nowadays with the programmable pipeline, one could also do the index dereferencing manually in the shaders, basically (mis)using the vertex attributes and accessing the real attribute arrays via a texture buffer object, but that is quite advanced and the performance implications are not clear.
I generated model (Suzie) in blender and exported it to .obj file with normals. During loading mode to my app i noticed that numbers of vertices and normals are diffrent (2012 and 1967).
I try to implement simple cell shading. The problem is in passing normals to shader. For storing vertex data i use vectors from glm.
std::vector<unsigned int> face_indices;
std::vector<unsigned int> normal_indices;
std::vector<glm::vec3> geometry;
std::vector<glm::vec3> normals;
Result i've got so far
Buffers Layout
glBindVertexArray(VAO);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, VertexVBOID);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, geometry.size() * sizeof(glm::vec3), &geometry[0], GL_STATIC_DRAW);
glVertexAttribPointer(0, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0, 0);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(1);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, NormalVBOID);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, normals.size() * sizeof(glm::vec3), &normals[0], GL_DYNAMIC_DRAW);
glVertexAttribPointer(1, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 0, 0);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, VIndexVBOID);
glBufferData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, face_indices.size() * sizeof(unsigned int), &face_indices[0], GL_DYNAMIC_DRAW);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0);
glBindVertexArray(0);
Rendering fragment
glBindVertexArray(VAO);
glPolygonMode(GL_FRONT_AND_BACK, GL_QUADS);
glDrawElements(GL_QUADS, face_indices.size(), GL_UNSIGNED_INT, (void*)0);
glBindVertexArray(0);
The reason that had such wierd problem was that some normals were used more than once to preserve disk space so i had to rearrange them in a proper order. So the solution is pretty trival.
geometry.clear();
normals.clear();
geometry.resize(vv.size());
normals.resize(vv.size());
for (unsigned int i = 0; i < face_indices.size(); i++)
{
int vi = face_indices[i];
int ni = normal_indices[i];
glm::vec3 v = vv [vi];
glm::vec3 n = vn [ni];
geometry[vi] = v ;
normals[vi] = n ;
indices.push_back(vi);
}
You should also keep in mind that using the smooth modifier in Blender before export will in some cases help ensure that you have 1 normal per vertex (you may or may not need to also set per-vert normal view instead of face-normal view...can't rem so you'll have to test). This is because by default, blender uses per-face normals. The smooth modifier ("w" hotkey menu)
will switch it to per-vertex norms. Then when you export, you export verts and norms as usual, and the number should match. It doesn't always, but this has worked for me in the past.
This could possibly mean less unnecessary juggling of your data during import.
I decided to import Wavefront .OBJ format to a test-scene that I'm working on. I get the model (vertices) to be in the right place and it displays fine. When I then apply a texture a lot of things looks distorted. I checked my Maya scene (there it looks good), and the object has many more uv-coordinates than vertex positions (this is what makes the scene looks weird in OpenGL, is my guess).
How would I go about loading a scene like that. Do I need to duplicate vertices and how do I store it in the vertex-buffer object?
You are right that you have to duplicate the vertices.
In addition to that you have to sort them in draw order, meaning that you have to order the vertices with the same offsets as the texture coordinates and normals.
basically you'll need this kind of structure:
float *verts = {v1_x,v1_y,v1_z,v1_w,v2_x,v2_y,v2_z,v2_w,...};
float *normals = {n1_x,n1_y,n1_z,n2_x,n2_y,n2_z,...};
float *texcoords = {t1_u,t1_v,t1_w,t2_u,t2_v,t2_w,...};
This however would mean that you have at least 108bytes per Triangle.
3(vert,norm,tex)
*3(xyz/uvw)
*3(points in tri)
*4(bytes in a float))
-----------------------
= 108
You can significantly reduce that number by only duplicating the vertices that actually are duplicate (have identical texture coordinate,vertices and normals meaning: smoothed normals and no UV borders) and using an Index Buffer Object to set the draw order.
I faced the same problem recently in a small project and I just split the models along the hard-edges and UV-Shell borders therefore creating only the necessary duplicate Vertices. Then I used the glm.h and glm.cpp from Nate Robins and copied/sorted the normals and texture coordinates in the same order as the vertices.
Then setup the VBO and IBO:
//this is for Data that does not change dynamically
//GL_DYNAMIC_DRAW and others are available
GLuint mDrawMode = GL_STATIC_DRAW;
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//Setup the VBO
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
GLuint mId;
glGenBuffers(1, &mId);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mId);
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER,
mMaxNumberOfVertices * (mVertexBlockSize + mNormalBlockSize + mColorBlockSize + mTexCoordBlockSize),
0,
mDrawMode);
glBufferSubData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mVertexOffset, numberOfVertsToStore * mVertexBlockSize, vertices);
glBufferSubData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mNormalOffset, numberOfVertsToStore * mNormalBlockSize, normals);
glBufferSubData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mColorOffset, numberOfVertsToStore * mColorBlockSize, colors);
glBufferSubData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mTexCoordOffset, numberOfVertsToStore * mTexCoordBlockSize, texCoords);
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//Setup the IBO
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
GLuint IBOId;
glGenBuffers(1, &IBOId);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, IBOId);
glBufferData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, mMaxNumberOfIndices * sizeof(GLuint), 0, mDrawMode);
glBufferSubData(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0, numberOfIndicesToStore * sizeof(GLuint), indices);
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
//This is how to draw the object
//////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, mId);
glBindBuffer(GL_ELEMENT_ARRAY_BUFFER, IBOId);
//Enables and Disables are only necessary each draw
//when they change between objects
glEnableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glVertexPointer(mVertexComponents, GL_FLOAT, 0, (void*)mVertexOffset);
if(mNormalBlockSize){
glEnableClientState(GL_NORMAL_ARRAY);
glNormalPointer(GL_FLOAT, 0, (void*)mNormalOffset);
}
if(mColorBlockSize){
glEnableClientState(GL_COLOR_ARRAY);
glColorPointer(mColorComponents, GL_FLOAT, 0, (void*)mColorOffset);
}
if(mTexCoordBlockSize){
glEnableClientState(GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY);
glTexCoordPointer(mTexCoordComponents, GL_FLOAT, 0, (void*)mTexCoordOffset);
}
glDrawRangeElements(primMode,
idFirstVertex,
idLastVertex,
idLastVertex - idFirstVertex + 1,
mAttachedIndexBuffer->getDataType(),
0);
if(mTexCoordBlockSize)
glDisableClientState(GL_TEXTURE_COORD_ARRAY);
if(mColorBlockSize)
glDisableClientState(GL_COLOR_ARRAY);
if(mNormalBlockSize)
glDisableClientState(GL_NORMAL_ARRAY);
glDisableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);