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Mastering Graphics Programming with Vulkan

You're reading from  Mastering Graphics Programming with Vulkan

Product type Book
Published in Feb 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803244792
Pages 382 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Marco Castorina Marco Castorina
Profile icon Marco Castorina
Gabriel Sassone Gabriel Sassone
Profile icon Gabriel Sassone
View More author details

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Foundations of a Modern Rendering Engine
2. Chapter 1: Introducing the Raptor Engine and Hydra 3. Chapter 2: Improving Resources Management 4. Chapter 3: Unlocking Multi-Threading 5. Chapter 4: Implementing a Frame Graph 6. Chapter 5: Unlocking Async Compute 7. Part 2: GPU-Driven Rendering
8. Chapter 6: GPU-Driven Rendering 9. Chapter 7: Rendering Many Lights with Clustered Deferred Rendering 10. Chapter 8: Adding Shadows Using Mesh Shaders 11. Chapter 9: Implementing Variable Rate Shading 12. Chapter 10: Adding Volumetric Fog 13. Part 3: Advanced Rendering Techniques
14. Chapter 11: Temporal Anti-Aliasing 15. Chapter 12: Getting Started with Ray Tracing 16. Chapter 13: Revisiting Shadows with Ray Tracing 17. Chapter 14: Adding Dynamic Diffuse Global Illumination with Ray Tracing 18. Chapter 15: Adding Reflections with Ray Tracing 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Implementing shadow mapping using mesh shaders

Now that we have looked at the different ways to render a shadow, we will describe the algorithm and the implementation’s detail used to render many shadow maps at once leveraging the mesh shader power.

Overview

In this section, we will give an overview of the algorithm. What we are trying to achieve is to render shadows using meshlets and mesh shaders, but this will require some compute work to generate commands to actually draw the meshlets.

We will draw shadows coming from point lights, and we will use cubemaps as textures to store the necessary information. We will talk about cubemaps in the following section.

Back to the algorithm, the first step will be to cull mesh instances against lights. This is done in a compute shader and will save a per-light list of visible mesh instances. Mesh instances are used to retrieve associated meshes later on, and per-meshlet culling will be performed using task shaders later on...

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