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- .. _doc_introduction_to_shaders:
- Introduction to shaders
- =======================
- This page explains what shaders are and will give you an overview of how they
- work in Godot. For a detailed reference of the engine's shading language, see
- :ref:`doc_shading_language`.
- Shaders are a special kind of program that runs on Graphics Processing Units
- (GPUs). They were initially used to shade 3D scenes but can nowadays do much
- more. You can use them to control how the engine draws geometry and pixels on
- the screen, allowing you to achieve all sorts of effects.
- Modern rendering engines like Godot draw everything with shaders: graphics cards
- can run thousands of instructions in parallel, leading to incredible rendering
- speed.
- Because of their parallel nature, though, shaders don't process information the
- way a typical program does. Shader code runs on each vertex or pixel in
- isolation. You cannot store data between frames either. As a result, when
- working with shaders, you need to code and think differently from other
- programming languages.
- Suppose you want to update all the pixels in a texture to a given color. In
- GDScript, your code would use ``for`` loops::
- for x in range(width):
- for y in range(height):
- set_color(x, y, some_color)
- Your code is already part of a loop in a shader, so the corresponding code would
- look like this.
- .. code-block:: glsl
- void fragment() {
- COLOR = some_color;
- }
- .. note::
- The graphics card calls the ``fragment()`` function once or more for each
- pixel it has to draw. More on that below.
- Shaders in Godot
- ----------------
- Godot provides a shading language based on the popular OpenGL Shading Language
- (GLSL) but simplified. The engine handles some of the lower-level initialization
- work for you, making it easier to write complex shaders.
- In Godot, shaders are made up of main functions called "processor functions".
- Processor functions are the entry point for your shader into the program. There
- are seven different processor functions.
- 1. The ``vertex()`` function runs over all the vertices in the mesh and sets
- their positions and some other per-vertex variables. Used in
- :ref:`canvas_item shaders <doc_canvas_item_shader>` and
- :ref:`spatial shaders <doc_spatial_shader>`.
- 2. The ``fragment()`` function runs for every pixel covered by the mesh. It uses
- values output by the ``vertex()`` function, interpolated between the
- vertices. Used in :ref:`canvas_item shaders <doc_canvas_item_shader>` and
- :ref:`spatial shaders <doc_spatial_shader>`.
- 3. The ``light()`` function runs for every pixel and for every light. It takes
- variables from the ``fragment()`` function and from its previous runs. Used
- in :ref:`canvas_item shaders <doc_canvas_item_shader>` and
- :ref:`spatial shaders <doc_spatial_shader>`.
- 4. The ``start()`` function runs for every particle in a particle system once
- when the particle is first spawned. Used in
- :ref:`particles shaders <doc_particle_shader>`.
- 5. The ``process()`` function runs for every particle in a particle system for
- each frame. Used in :ref:`particles shaders <doc_particle_shader>`.
- 6. The ``sky()`` function runs for every pixel in the radiance cubemap when the
- radiance cubemap needs to be updated, and for every pixel on the current
- screen. Used in :ref:`sky shaders <doc_sky_shader>`.
- 7. The ``fog()`` function runs for every froxel in the volumetric fog froxel
- buffer that intersects with the :ref:`FogVolume <class_FogVolume>`. Used by
- :ref:`fog shaders <doc_fog_shader>`.
- .. warning::
- The ``light()`` function won't run if the ``vertex_lighting`` render mode is
- enabled, or if **Rendering > Quality > Shading > Force Vertex Shading** is
- enabled in the Project Settings. It's enabled by default on mobile
- platforms.
- .. note::
- Godot also exposes an API for users to write totally custom GLSL shaders. For
- more information see :ref:`doc_compute_shaders`.
- Shader types
- ------------
- Instead of supplying a general-purpose configuration for all uses (2D, 3D,
- particles, sky, fog), you must specify the type of shader you're writing.
- Different types support different render modes, built-in variables, and
- processing functions.
- In Godot, all shaders need to specify their type in the first line, like so:
- .. code-block:: glsl
- shader_type spatial;
- Here are the available types:
- * :ref:`spatial <doc_spatial_shader>` for 3D rendering.
- * :ref:`canvas_item <doc_canvas_item_shader>` for 2D rendering.
- * :ref:`particles <doc_particle_shader>` for particle systems.
- * :ref:`sky <doc_sky_shader>` to render :ref:`Skies <class_Sky>`.
- * :ref:`fog <doc_fog_shader>` to render :ref:`FogVolumes <class_FogVolume>`
- Render modes
- ------------
- Shaders have optional render modes you can specify on the second line, after the
- shader type, like so:
- .. code-block:: glsl
- shader_type spatial;
- render_mode unshaded, cull_disabled;
- Render modes alter the way Godot applies the shader. For example, the
- ``unshaded`` mode makes the engine skip the built-in light processor function.
- Each shader type has different render modes. See the reference for each shader
- type for a complete list of render modes.
- Vertex processor
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The ``vertex()`` processing function is called once for every vertex in
- ``spatial`` and ``canvas_item`` shaders.
- Each vertex in your world's geometry has properties like a position and color.
- The function modifies those values and passes them to the fragment function. You
- can also use it to send extra data to the fragment function using varyings.
- By default, Godot transforms your vertex information for you, which is necessary
- to project geometry onto the screen. You can use render modes to transform the
- data yourself; see the :ref:`Spatial shader doc <doc_spatial_shader>` for an
- example.
- Fragment processor
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The ``fragment()`` processing function is used to set up the Godot material
- parameters per pixel. This code runs on every visible pixel the object or
- primitive draws. It is only available in ``spatial``, ``canvas_item``, and ``sky`` shaders.
- The standard use of the fragment function is to set up material properties used
- to calculate lighting. For example, you would set values for ``ROUGHNESS``,
- ``RIM``, or ``TRANSMISSION``, which would tell the light function how the lights
- respond to that fragment. This makes it possible to control a complex shading
- pipeline without the user having to write much code. If you don't need this
- built-in functionality, you can ignore it and write your own light processing
- function, and Godot will optimize it away. For example, if you do not write a
- value to ``RIM``, Godot will not calculate rim lighting. During compilation,
- Godot checks to see if ``RIM`` is used; if not, it cuts all the corresponding
- code out. Therefore, you will not waste calculations on the effects that you do
- not use.
- Light processor
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- The ``light()`` processor runs per pixel too, and it runs once for every light
- that affects the object. It does not run if no lights affect the object. It
- exists as a function called inside the ``fragment()`` processor and typically
- operates on the material properties setup inside the ``fragment()`` function.
- The ``light()`` processor works differently in 2D than it does in 3D; for a
- description of how it works in each, see their documentation, :ref:`CanvasItem
- shaders <doc_canvas_item_shader>` and :ref:`Spatial shaders
- <doc_spatial_shader>`, respectively.
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