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Please review the following information to ensure ** the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 requirements ** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html. ** $QT_END_LICENSE$ ** ****************************************************************************/ /*! \example shadow-map-qml \title Qt 3D: Shadow Map QML Example \ingroup qt3d-examples-qml \brief A Qt 3D QML application that illustrates how to render a scene in Qt 3D with shadows. \image shadowmapping-qt3d.png \e {Qt 3D Shadow Map} illustrates how to configure the renderer in order to accommodate custom rendering techniques. The example application displays a self-shadowed plane and trefoil knot. We implement \l{Shadow Mapping}{shadow mapping} using a two pass rendering. In the first pass, we generate the shadow information. In the second pass, we generate the scene using the forward rendering technique with Phong shading, while at the same time using the information gathered in the first pass to draw the shadows. The entire rendering is configured using QML, but it is possible to use C++ to achieve the very same result. \include examples-run.qdocinc \section1 Setting Up the Scene We set up the entire scene in the \e main.qml file. To be able to use the types in the Q3D and Q3D Renderer modules, we must import the modules: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/main.qml \skipto import Qt3D \printuntil Render The first entities we create are a \l Camera, which represents the camera used for the final rendering, and a \l Configuration, which allows us to control this camera using the keyboard or the mouse: \printuntil } \printuntil } We then create a Light custom entity, which represents our light. It is a directional spotlight, placed somewhere above the plane and looking down at the scene’s origin: \printuntil } This light entity is used by our custom framegraph, ShadowMapFrameGraph, and our rendering effect, AdsEffect, whose instances are created just after the light: \printuntil ] \printuntil } Last, we create three entities for the meshes in the scene: a trefoil knot, a toy plane, and a ground plane. They aggregate a mesh, a transformation, and a material that uses the AdsEffect. The toy plane and the trefoil knot transformations are animated: \printuntil /^\}/ \section1 Specifying the Light We specify the Light custom entity in \e Light.qml. Again, we import the necessary modules: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/Light.qml \skipto import Qt3D \printuntil Qt3D.Render We then use an \l Entity type as the root element of the custom QML type. The light is a directional spotlight that exposes as properties a position, intensity, and a 4×4 transformation matrix: \printuntil matrix4x4 In the first rendering pass, we use the light as a camera, and therefore we use a \l Camera entity within the light and expose it as a property: \printuntil /^\}/ \section1 Configuring the Framegraph In Qt3D, the framegraph is the data-driven configuration for the rendering. We implement the framegraph in the \e ShadowMapFrameGraph.qml file. In addition to the Qt3D and Qt3D Renderer modules, we also import the Qt Quick module: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/ShadowMapFrameGraph.qml \skipto import Qt3D \printuntil QtQuick The code defines a \l FrameGraph entity that has a tree of entities as the active framegraph: \printuntil clearColor Any path from the leaves of this tree to the root is a viable framegraph configuration. Filter entities can enable or disable such paths, and selector entities can alter the configuration. In our case, the tree looks like this: \badcode Viewport RenderPassFilter RenderTargetSelector ClearBuffer CameraSelector RenderPassFilter ClearBuffer CameraSelector \endcode So we have two paths from the topmost \l Viewport entity. Each path corresponds to a pass of the shadow map technique. The paths are enabled and disabled using a RenderPassFilter, an entity that can filter depending on arbitrary values defined in a given render pass. In this example, it is a string: \printuntil ] The actual passes are not defined here. The framegraph simply modifies its configuration when a given pass is rendered. \section1 Generating the Shadow Map In the shadow map generation pass, we must render to an offscreen surface (Framebuffer Object) which has a depth texture attachment. In Qt3D, it is represented by the RenderTarget entity, which has a number of attachments. In this example, we need only a depth attachment. We define it as a RenderAttachment entity using the RenderAttachment.DepthAttachment \c type that stores the depth and a Texture2D entity that actually configures the exture storage used to store the depth information: \printuntil ] \printuntil } Moreover, in this first pass, we must render using the light’s camera. Therefore, we have a CameraSelector entity that sets the camera to the one exported by the Light: \skipto CameraSelector \printuntil } The second pass is more straightforward, because we simply render to the screen using the main camera. \section1 Using Effects The bulk of the magic happens in the \e AdsEffect.qml file, where our main \l Effect entity is defined. It implements the Ambient, Diffuse and Specular (ADS) Lightning Model Phong shading with the addition of shadow mapped generated shadows. An effect contains the implementation of a particular rendering strategy. In this example, shadow mapping using two passes: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/AdsEffect.qml \skipto Effect \printuntil Light The \c parameters list defines some default values for the effect. The values will get mapped to OpenGL shader program uniforms, so that in the shaders we can access them. In this example, we expose some information from the Light entity (position, intensity, view or projection matrix defined by the internal camera) and the shadow map texture exposed by the framegraph: \skipto parameters: \printuntil ] It is possible to put such parameters all the way down, from a \l Material, to its \l Effect, to one of the effect’s \l Techniques. This allows a \l Material instance to override defaults in an \l Effect or \l Technique. The bindings array provides the same thing, except that it also allows us to rename some parameters. In this example, it renames the \c ambient, \c diffuse, and \c specular values defined in the material to the actual uniform names used by the shader programs: \skipto bindings: \printuntil ] To adapt the implementation to different hardware or OpenGL versions, we could use one or more \l Technique elements. In this example, only one technique is provided, targeting OpenGL 3.2 Core, or later: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/AdsEffect.qml \skipto techniques: \printuntil } Inside the technique, we finally have the definition of our two rendering passes. We \e tag each pass with an \l Annotation entity, matching the ones we specified in the framegraph configuration, so that each pass will have different rendering settings: \printuntil ] The first pass is the shadow map generation. We load a suitable set of GLSL shaders, which are actually extremely simple. They do only MVP (Model, View, Projection) to bring meshes from their model space into clip space (and, remember, in this first pass, the light is the camera). The fragment shader is totally empty, because there is no color to be generated, and the depth will be automatically captured for us by OpenGL: \printuntil } In this first pass, we also set some custom OpenGL state in the form of a polygon offset and depth testing mode: \printuntil ] \section1 Rendering Using Phong Shading The second pass is a normal forward rendering using Phong shading. The code in the effect entity is extremely simple. We simply configure some parameters and load a pair of shaders which will be used when drawing. The first part of the shadow mapping happens in the vertex shader defined in \e ads.vert file, where we output towards the fragment shader the coordinates of each vertex in light space: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/shaders/ads.vert \skipto mat4( \skipto positionInLightSpace \printuntil ; Actually, the coordinates get adjusted a little to allow us to easily sample the shadow map texture. The second part happens in the fragment shader defined in the \e ads.frag file, where we sample the shadow map. If the currently processed fragment is behind the one closest to the light, then the current fragment is in shadow (and only gets ambient contribution). Otherwise, it gets full Phong shading: \quotefromfile shadow-map-qml/shaders/ads.frag \skipto main \printuntil } */