slang-shaders/blurs/shaders/royale/README.md

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This info pertains to the Blurs by TroggleMonkey:
DESCRIPTION:
Gaussian blurs are common building blocks in multi-pass shaders, and this
library of optimized and tested blurs should make it easier to use whatever size
blur you need. All of these shaders are based on the tex2Dblur* functions in
include/blur-functions.h, so you can use those directly if you ever need to
add more processing to the same pass as a Gaussian blur.
PICK THE RIGHT BLUR FOR YOUR USE CASE:
There are several different types of blurs, ranging in size from 3-12 texels:
a.) "Resize" separable blurs use vertical and horizontal passes and require N
taps for an Nx blur. These are arbitrarily resizable.
b.) "Fast" separable blurs use vertical and horizontal passes and require N taps
for an (N*2 - 1)x blur. They exploit bilinear filtering to reduce the
required taps from e.g. 9 to 5. These are always faster, but they have
strict image scale requirements.
c.) "Resize" one-pass blurs combine the vertical/horizontal passes of the
"resize" separable blurs, and they require NxN taps for an NxN blur. These
perform slowly enough that only tex2Dblur3x3resize is useful/included.
d.) Other one-pass blurs combine the vertical/horizontal passes of the "fast"
separable blurs, and they exploit bilinear filtering the same way. They're
faster than separable blurs at 3x3, competitive at 5x5 depending on options,
and slower at 7x7 and above...but larger blurs may still be useful if you're
hurting for passes.
e.) "Shared" one-pass blurs go a step further: They also use quad-pixel
communication with fine-grained derivatives to distribute texture samples
across a 2x2 pixel quad. (ddx() and ddy() are required, as well as a GPU
that uses fine-grained derivatives). These blurs are faster than the other
one-pass blurs, but they have some artifacts from combining sample-sharing
with bilinear sampling, so they're best reserved for reblurring an already-
blurred input.
Every blur expects linear filtering. Except for resize separable blurs, all
require a pass scale of (1/(2^M)) for some M >= 0. That is, the output image
has to have a 1:1 pixel:texel ratio with some mipmap of the input image, so use
e.g. scaleN = "1.0" or scaleN = "0.25", not scaleN = "0.33" or scaleN = "2.0".
Note: mipmap_inputN must = "true" in your .slangp file for scales other than 1.0.
There are two suffixes on the .slang files relating to gamma correction:
* Blurs with no suffix assume linear RGB input and output.
* Blurs with a "-last-pass" suffix use pow() to gamma-correct their output.
* Blurs with a "-gamma-encode-every-fbo" suffix use pow() to linearize each
input sample and again to gamma-correct the output. These blurs are MUCH
slower than blurs without this suffix, but they're provided in case you want
to be [almost] gamma-correct on platforms without sRGB FBO's. (The "almost"
is because bilinear filtering still won't be gamma-correct without sRGB.)
* There are also blurs with both suffixes. This may seem redundant, but they
make it easier to use a different output gamma for the last pass than for
the rest of the pipeline (such as when simulating another display device like
a Game Boy Advance or CRT). See srgb-helpers/README.txt for more information.
BENCHMARK RESULTS:
Blurs have different performance characteristics depending on whether the input
is mipmapped and depending on whether they're gamma-encoding every FBO. Here's
an excerpt from the blur-functions.h description with a comparison. Note that
benchmarks without an sRGB heading use "-gamma-encode-every-fbo" suffixes, and
you can just look at the sRGB performance figures if you don't care about gamma:
// Here are some framerates from a GeForce 8800GTS. The first pass resizes to
// viewport size (4x in this test) and linearizes for sRGB codepaths, and the
// remaining passes perform 6 full blurs. Mipmapped tests are performed at the
// same scale, so they just measure the cost of mipmapping each FBO (only every
// other FBO is mipmapped for separable blurs, to mimic realistic usage).
// Mipmap Neither sRGB+Mipmap sRGB Function
// 76.0 92.3 131.3 193.7 tex2Dblur3fast
// 63.2 74.4 122.4 175.5 tex2Dblur3resize
// 93.7 121.2 159.3 263.2 tex2Dblur3x3
// 59.7 68.7 115.4 162.1 tex2Dblur3x3resize
// 63.2 74.4 122.4 175.5 tex2Dblur5fast
// 49.3 54.8 100.0 132.7 tex2Dblur5resize
// 59.7 68.7 115.4 162.1 tex2Dblur5x5
// 64.9 77.2 99.1 137.2 tex2Dblur6x6shared
// 55.8 63.7 110.4 151.8 tex2Dblur7fast
// 39.8 43.9 83.9 105.8 tex2Dblur7resize
// 40.0 44.2 83.2 104.9 tex2Dblur7x7
// 56.4 65.5 71.9 87.9 tex2Dblur8x8shared
// 49.3 55.1 99.9 132.5 tex2Dblur9fast
// 33.3 36.2 72.4 88.0 tex2Dblur9resize
// 27.8 29.7 61.3 72.2 tex2Dblur9x9
// 37.2 41.1 52.6 60.2 tex2Dblur10x10shared
// 44.4 49.5 91.3 117.8 tex2Dblur11fast
// 28.8 30.8 63.6 75.4 tex2Dblur11resize
// 33.6 36.5 40.9 45.5 tex2Dblur12x12shared
BASIC USAGE:
The .slangp presets in the quality-test-presets folder provide usage examples
for basically every .slang blur shader. The "-srgb" suffix on some .slangp
presets is an explicit notice that they use sRGB FBO's. Note how and when the
"-last-pass" suffix is used for each .slang file, etc.
The provided .slangp files with the "-mipmap" suffix are used to test quality and
benchmarking with mipmapping enabled, but none of them actually use mipmapping
as a feature in and of itself. The following contrived .slangp would do that:
shaders = "4"
# Pass0: Linearize RGB:
shader0 = ../../srgb-helpers/first-pass-linearize.slang
filter_linear0 = "true"
scale_type0 = "source"
scale0 = "1.0"
srgb_framebuffer0 = "true"
# Pass1: Upsize to 4x. Pretend this pass does significant processing at 4x.
shader1 = ../../stock.slang
filter_linear1 = "true"
scale_type1 = "source"
scale1 = "4.0"
srgb_framebuffer1 = "true"
# Pass2: Blur a source-sized mipmap 9x vertically; just shrink horizontally.
shader2 = ../blur9fast-vertical.slang
filter_linear2 = "true"
scale_type2 = "source"
scale2 = "0.25"
srgb_framebuffer2 = "true"
mipmap_input = "true"
# Pass3: Blur 9x horizontally
shader3 = ../blur9fast-horizontal.slang
filter_linear3 = "true"
scale_type3 = "source"
scale3 = "1.0"
srgb_framebuffer3 = "true"
# Pass4: Scale to the screen size and gamma-correct the output:
shader4 = ../../srgb-helpers/last-pass-gamma-correct.slang
filter_linear4 = "true"
scale_type4 = "viewport"
scale4 = "1.0"