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Authoring an Effect
Getting Started |
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This lesson covers writing your own IEffect implementation, specifically a custom effect for rendering a skybox with a cubemap.
First create a new project using the instructions from the previous lessons: Using DeviceResources and Adding the DirectX Tool Kit which we will use for this lesson.
A skybox is a shape like a sphere or a cube that surrounds the render scene giving the appearance of the distant sky, horizon, and/or surroundings. In our implementation we are going to be using a cubemap (i.e. 6-faced texture) to provide the texture information on the sky. For the geometry, we'll make use of GeometricPrimitive, and the shaders we are using for the SkyboxEffect are as follows:
cbuffer SkyboxConstants : register(b0)
{
float4x4 WorldViewProj;
}
struct VSOutput
{
float3 TexCoord : TEXCOORD0;
float4 PositionPS : SV_Position;
};
VSOutput main(float4 position : SV_Position)
{
VSOutput vout;
vout.PositionPS = mul(position, WorldViewProj);
vout.PositionPS.z = vout.PositionPS.w; // Draw on far plane
vout.TexCoord = position.xyz;
return vout;
}
TextureCube<float4> CubeMap : register(t0);
SamplerState Sampler : register(s0);
float4 main(float3 texCoord : TEXCOORD0) : SV_TARGET0
{
return CubeMap.Sample(Sampler, normalize(texCoord));
}
Our vertex shader only makes use of the vertex position information, and generates the texture coordinates assuming the skybox is centered about the origin (0,0,0). It also sets the z
value so that it's at the view far plane.
Save these three files to your new project's directory, and then from the top menu select Project / Add Existing Item.... Select "SkyboxEffect_Common.hlsli", "SkyboxEffect_VS.hlsl", and "SkyboxEffect_PS.hlsl" and add them.
View Properties on "SkyboxEffect_VS.hlsl" and for "All Configurations" and "All Platforms", set the "Shader Type" to "Vertex Shader (/vs)" and select "OK".
View Properties on "SkyboxEffect_PS.hlsl" and for "All Configurations" and "All Platforms", set the "Shader Type" to "Pixel Shader (/ps)" and select "OK".
Build and run your project. It will have the same blank scene as before, but should have produced SkyboxEffect_VS.cso
and SkyboxEffect_PS.cso
.
Save the file ReadData.h to your new project's folder. Using to the top menu and select Project / Add Existing Item.... Select "ReadData.h" and hit "OK".
Create a new file SkyboxEffect.h in your project:
#include <vector>
class SkyboxEffect : public DirectX::IEffect
{
public:
explicit SkyboxEffect(ID3D11Device* device);
virtual void Apply(
ID3D11DeviceContext* deviceContext) override;
virtual void GetVertexShaderBytecode(
void const** pShaderByteCode,
size_t* pByteCodeLength) override;
void SetTexture(ID3D11ShaderResourceView* value);
private:
Microsoft::WRL::ComPtr<ID3D11VertexShader> m_vs;
Microsoft::WRL::ComPtr<ID3D11PixelShader> m_ps;
Microsoft::WRL::ComPtr<ID3D11ShaderResourceView> m_texture;
std::vector<uint8_t> m_vsBlob;
};
Create a new file SkyboxEffect.cpp in your project:
#include "pch.h"
#include "SkyboxEffect.h"
#include "ReadData.h"
SkyboxEffect::SkyboxEffect(
ID3D11Device* device)
{
m_vsBlob = DX::ReadData(L"SkyboxEffect_VS.cso");
DX::ThrowIfFailed(
device->CreateVertexShader(m_vsBlob.data(), m_vsBlob.size(),
nullptr, m_vs.ReleaseAndGetAddressOf()));
auto psBlob = DX::ReadData(L"SkyboxEffect_PS.cso");
DX::ThrowIfFailed(
device->CreatePixelShader(psBlob.data(), psBlob.size(),
nullptr, m_ps.ReleaseAndGetAddressOf()));
}
void SkyboxEffect::Apply(
ID3D11DeviceContext* deviceContext)
{
deviceContext->PSSetShaderResources(0, 1, m_texture.GetAddressOf());
deviceContext->VSSetShader(m_vs.Get(), nullptr, 0);
deviceContext->PSSetShader(m_ps.Get(), nullptr, 0);
}
void SkyboxEffect::GetVertexShaderBytecode(
void const** pShaderByteCode,
size_t* pByteCodeLength)
{
assert(pShaderByteCode != nullptr && pByteCodeLength != nullptr);
*pShaderByteCode = m_vsBlob.data();
*pByteCodeLength = m_vsBlob.size();
}
void SkyboxEffect::SetTexture(
ID3D11ShaderResourceView* value)
{
m_texture = value;
}
For a DirectX Tool Kit effect, only Apply and GetVertexShaderBytecode are required. We added SetTexture as a way to set the texture resource which can be changed dynamically.
Build and make sure it compiles.
Many of the DirectX Tool Kit built-in effects support a number of properties which influence the selection of the VS/PS shader combination. This typically is implemented by creating the
ID3D11VertexShader
andID3D11PixelShader
objects on-demand when Apply is called based on current property values. Since our skybox effect has only one set of shaders, we go ahead and create them in the constructor.
While we've implemented the basic effect, we are missing a key bit of information. The vertex shader makes use of a constant buffer to provide the transformation matrix. While we could just add another effect-specific method to control this, we will instead add the standard IEffectMatrices interface to our skybox effect.
In SkyboxEffect.h, modify your class's declaration to add the additional interface:
class SkyboxEffect : public DirectX::IEffect, public DirectX::IEffectMatrices
Then add to the public
section:
void XM_CALLCONV SetWorld(DirectX::FXMMATRIX value) override;
void XM_CALLCONV SetView(DirectX::FXMMATRIX value) override;
void XM_CALLCONV SetProjection(DirectX::FXMMATRIX value) override;
void XM_CALLCONV SetMatrices(DirectX::FXMMATRIX world, DirectX::CXMMATRIX view, DirectX::CXMMATRIX projection) override;
And finally add to the private
section (note we have a good reason for not having a m_world
matrix variable which we will get to shortly):
DirectX::SimpleMath::Matrix m_view;
DirectX::SimpleMath::Matrix m_proj;
DirectX::SimpleMath::Matrix m_worldViewProj;
In SkyboxEffect.cpp, add these methods:
void SkyboxEffect::SetWorld(FXMMATRIX /*value*/)
{
// Skybox doesn't use the world matrix by design.
}
void SkyboxEffect::SetView(FXMMATRIX value)
{
m_view = value;
}
void SkyboxEffect::SetProjection(FXMMATRIX value)
{
m_proj = value;
}
void SkyboxEffect::SetMatrices(FXMMATRIX /*world*/, CXMMATRIX view, CXMMATRIX projection)
{
// Skybox doesn't use the world matrix by design.
m_view = view;
m_proj = projection;
}
It should be noted that we are very careful in the use of C++ multiple-inheritance only for interfaces. See C++ Core Guidelines.
We have all the data we need now for the constant buffer. In order to compute the worldViewProj value, we will need to do a matrix multiply. We'd like to avoid doing this more often than necessary, either keeping it from the previous frame if it's not changed or doing it only once if multiple matrices are updated in a single frame. The built-in effects all use a dirty bits design which we will use here.
In SkyboxEffect.h, add to the class's private variable declarations:
uint32_t m_dirtyFlags;
struct __declspec(align(16)) SkyboxEffectConstants
{
DirectX::XMMATRIX worldViewProj;
};
DirectX::ConstantBuffer<SkyboxEffectConstants> m_constantBuffer;
At the top of SkyboxEffect.cpp after the using
statements, add:
namespace
{
constexpr uint32_t DirtyConstantBuffer = 0x1;
constexpr uint32_t DirtyWVPMatrix = 0x2;
}
Update the SkyboxEffect constructor to initialize the new variables with all 'dirty bits' set:
SkyboxEffect::SkyboxEffect(ID3D11Device* device) :
m_dirtyFlags(uint32_t(-1)),
m_constantBuffer(device)
{
static_assert((sizeof(SkyboxEffect::SkyboxEffectConstants) % 16) == 0, "CB size alignment");
// Get shaders
...
In each of the camera settings methods SetView, SetProjection, and SetMatrices, set the dirty bit to indicate the matrix changed:
m_dirtyFlags |= DirtyWVPMatrix;
Now we revisit Apply to handle the constant buffer computation and updating using those 'dirty bits':
void SkyboxEffect::Apply(ID3D11DeviceContext* deviceContext)
{
if (m_dirtyFlags & DirtyWVPMatrix)
{
// Skybox ignores m_world matrix and the translation of m_view
XMMATRIX view = m_view;
view.r[3] = g_XMIdentityR3;
m_worldViewProj = XMMatrixMultiply(view, m_proj);
m_dirtyFlags &= ~DirtyWVPMatrix;
m_dirtyFlags |= DirtyConstantBuffer;
}
if (m_dirtyFlags & DirtyConstantBuffer)
{
SkyboxEffectConstants constants;
constants.worldViewProj = XMMatrixTranspose(m_worldViewProj);
m_constantBuffer.SetData(deviceContext, constants);
m_dirtyFlags &= ~DirtyConstantBuffer;
}
auto cb = m_constantBuffer.GetBuffer();
deviceContext->VSSetConstantBuffers(0, 1, &cb);
deviceContext->PSSetShaderResources(0, 1, m_texture.GetAddressOf());
deviceContext->VSSetShader(m_vs.Get(), nullptr, 0);
deviceContext->PSSetShader(m_ps.Get(), nullptr, 0);
}
In most effects, we use world, view, and projection matrices. Many built-in effects compute inverse matrices as well as various concatenations from these matrices. For the skybox effect, however, we want unique behavior. The skybox is 'infinitely far away', so no amount of translation of the view should move it. Also, there really is no sense it should be 'scaled' nor does the sky itself need it's own transform. Therefore, we don't use a world matrix at all in our effect, and we zero out the translation from the camera view matrix.
At this point, build to ensure everything compiles and we now have a fully implemented skybox effect.
Save the files lobbycube.dds to your new project's folder. Using to the top menu and select Project / Add Existing Item.... Select "lobbycube.dds" and hit "OK".
Add to the Game.h file after the other includes:
#include "SkyboxEffect.h"
In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:
std::unique_ptr<DirectX::GamePad> m_gamePad;
DirectX::SimpleMath::Matrix m_view;
DirectX::SimpleMath::Matrix m_proj;
float m_pitch;
float m_yaw;
std::unique_ptr<DirectX::GeometricPrimitive> m_sky;
std::unique_ptr<DX::SkyboxEffect> m_effect;
Microsoft::WRL::ComPtr<ID3D11InputLayout> m_skyInputLayout;
Microsoft::WRL::ComPtr<ID3D11ShaderResourceView> m_cubemap;
In the Game.cpp file, modify the constructor to initialize the new variables:
Game::Game() noexcept(false) :
m_pitch(0),
m_yaw(0)
{
m_deviceResources = std::make_unique<DX::DeviceResources>();
m_deviceResources->RegisterDeviceNotify(this);
}
In the Initialize method, add:
m_gamePad = std::make_unique<GamePad>();
In Game.cpp, modify TODO of CreateDeviceDependentResources to be:
auto context = m_deviceResources->GetD3DDeviceContext();
m_sky = GeometricPrimitive::CreateGeoSphere(context, 2.f, 3,
false /*invert for being inside the shape*/);
m_effect = std::make_unique<DX::SkyboxEffect>(device);
m_sky->CreateInputLayout(m_effect.get(),
m_skyInputLayout.ReleaseAndGetAddressOf());
DX::ThrowIfFailed(
CreateDDSTextureFromFile(device, L"lobbycube.dds",
nullptr, m_cubemap.ReleaseAndGetAddressOf()));
m_effect->SetTexture(m_cubemap.Get());
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of CreateWindowSizeDependentResources:
auto size = m_deviceResources->GetOutputSize();
m_proj = Matrix::CreatePerspectiveFieldOfView(XM_PI / 4.f,
float(size.right) / float(size.bottom), 0.1f, 10.f);
m_effect->SetProjection(m_proj);
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of Update:
auto pad = m_gamePad->GetState(0);
if (pad.IsConnected())
{
if (pad.IsViewPressed())
{
ExitGame();
}
if (pad.IsLeftStickPressed())
{
m_yaw = m_pitch = 0.f;
}
else
{
constexpr float ROTATION_GAIN = 0.1f;
m_yaw += -pad.thumbSticks.leftX * ROTATION_GAIN;
m_pitch += pad.thumbSticks.leftY * ROTATION_GAIN;
}
}
// limit pitch to straight up or straight down
constexpr float limit = XM_PIDIV2 - 0.01f;
m_pitch = std::max(-limit, m_pitch);
m_pitch = std::min(+limit, m_pitch);
// keep longitude in sane range by wrapping
if (m_yaw > XM_PI)
{
m_yaw -= XM_2PI;
}
else if (m_yaw < -XM_PI)
{
m_yaw += XM_2PI;
}
float y = sinf(m_pitch);
float r = cosf(m_pitch);
float z = r * cosf(m_yaw);
float x = r * sinf(m_yaw);
XMVECTORF32 lookAt = { x, y, z, 0.f };
m_view = XMMatrixLookAtRH(g_XMZero, lookAt, Vector3::Up);
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of both OnActivated and OnResuming:
m_gamePad->Resume();
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of both OnDeactivated and OnSuspending:
m_gamePad->Suspend();
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of OnDeviceLost:
m_sky.reset();
m_effect.reset();
m_skyInputLayout.Reset();
m_cubemap.Reset();
In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of Render:
m_effect->SetView(m_view);
m_sky->Draw(m_effect.get(), m_skyInputLayout.Get());
Build and run to see the skybox. Plug in a Xbox game controller and use the left stick to adjust the view to look around.
If you prefer to use mouse & keyboard controls, use the control scheme in Mouse and keyboard input.
You may notice that the text in the lobby-cube image appears backwards. The environment mapping in the shader assumes the cubemap 'surrounds' the scene, which means we are looking 'through' it which is what makes it seem backwards. If you want to flip it, just edit the vertex shader code in SkyboxEffect_VS.hlsl
:
VSOutput main(float4 position : SV_Position)
{
VSOutput vout;
vout.PositionPS = mul(position, WorldViewProj);
vout.PositionPS.z = vout.PositionPS.w; // Draw on far plane
vout.TexCoord.x = -position.x;
vout.TexCoord.yz = position.yz;
return vout;
}
- Usable versions of the SkyboxEffect class can be downloaded from here: .cpp / .h, and you will need the three shader files above as well.
Next lessons: Using HDR rendering
All content and source code for this package are subject to the terms of the MIT License.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact [email protected] with any additional questions or comments.
- Universal Windows Platform apps
- Windows desktop apps
- Windows 11
- Windows 10
- Windows 8.1
- Xbox One
- x86
- x64
- ARM64
- Visual Studio 2022
- Visual Studio 2019 (16.11)
- clang/LLVM v12 - v18
- MinGW 12.2, 13.2
- CMake 3.20