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Content Optimization

This article describes some tips and tricks which can help to optimize the performance of your project.

To show the performance status of the current scene, use the Performance profiler tool. This tool can give you a hint of what you should do to increase the performance.

Level of Details

Using Levels of Details (LODs) is the main way to optimize your project.

Creating LODs

To create LODs for the existing object do the following:

  1. In a 3D computer graphics software (Autodesk 3ds Max, Autodesk Maya, etc.) create one or more LODs for a mesh object. For example, you can just copy the existing object and create an object with the less number of triangles.
    Notice
    You should create a LOD for each part of the model to which a unique material is assigned.
  2. Position LODs at the same point, so that their coordinates coincide.
  3. Export these LODs as a single .mesh file, where each LOD is a surface of the object.
    Notice
    A separate surface is exported if it either needs a different material or represents a LOD. So keep the number of surfaces in the exported models as low as reasonably possible.

Here you can read more information about LODs.

Using LODs

LODs have a wide range of usage:

Switching by Distance

To speed up rendering, switch the LODs after the specified distance:

  1. Open the Nodes window by clicking Windows -> Nodes and choose your mesh object with LODs.
  2. In the Surfaces tab, specify Visibility, Fade and Parent parameters in the Surfaces tab of the node.

    • The maximum visible distance of the closest LOD should be the minimum visible distance of the next LOD. When the distance between the camera and an object become as specified, LODs will be switched.

    • To make this operation smoother and not so noticeable, specify minimum fade and maximum fade parameters for LODs. The idea is the same as for visible distance. The maximum fade distance of the closest LOD should be the minimum fade distance of the next LOD.

    • Minimum parent and maximum parent parameters allows you to specify from which object in the surface hierarchy the minimum visible distance will be measured. Here you can find more information about these parameters.

The following example shows how LODs are implemented in the Port Angeles demo:

14698 polygons 10840 polygons 2958 polygons

See also LODs samples in the Objects section (or <UNIGINE_SDK>/data/samples/object folder):

  • lods_00
  • lods_01
  • lods_02
  • lods_03

Using for Collision and Intersection

Another way to reduce performance costs is to create a collision and intersection detection surface for the mesh.

  1. Create a detection surface for whole mesh in a 3D editor.
  2. After adding the mesh to the world, enable the Intersection and Collision options for the detection surface.
  3. Disable these options (Intersection and Collision) for all other surfaces of the mesh to reduce the number of calculations.
  4. Specify the Viewport mask not to render the detection surface. Another way to not render the detection surface is not to assign material. See the detection box example in the City Traffic.

Working with a large number of objects

Use cluster and clutter to optimize a large number of objects. It allows managing a great number of identical meshes as a single object. This will simplify a spatial tree of nodes, thus increasing the performance.

  • To set a great number of identical meshes in the world with specified positions, use the ObjectMeshCluster.

    Here you can find an example of how to create a cluster from identical meshes.

  • To scatter a great number of identical meshes randomly in the world, use the ObjectMeshClutter.

    Here you can find an example of how to create a cluster from identical meshes.

Instancing

Surfaces of identical meshes which have the same materials assigned to them (and the same number of bones attached to their vertices, for ObjectMeshSkinned meshes) are automatically instanced and drawn in one draw call. The instancing flag is enabled by default.

It is highly recommended NOT to change the material of the surface in the surface properties of the node. This creates a copy material in the spatial tree of materials, thus decreasing the performance.

Do NOT change the material of the surface here!

To avoid that, create new materials in the materials libraries (click Windows -> Materials on the Menu bar) and create a hierarchy of the materials.

This will increase the performance of your project.

Impostors

There is a hint of how to optimize the performance if you use mesh clutters.

Use ObjectGrass as the farthest LOD of a mesh clutter. You should use a Grabber tool, to create impostors:

  1. Click Windows -> Tool on the Menu bar and choose the Grabber tab.
  2. Select the Impostor mode.

  3. Specify parameters of the tool. They should be the same as parameters of the mesh clutter.
  4. Click the Grab button and save the grabbed texture.
  5. Create a new impostor material for ObjectGrass by inheriting the grass_impostor_base material with the grabbed texture.

  6. Create a new ObjectGrass and assign created material to it.
  7. Specify the Visible distance parameter to the created ObjectGrass.

Decals

Using Decals is a great thing to optimize the performance. They allow you to add a lot of additional details at basically no performance cost.

For example, in the Port Angeles demo we use decals as the farthest LOD for town houses.

Textures

Do NOT use textures with a resolution greater than 4096x4096. That could significantly decrease your FPS number. To optimize your textures, do the following:

  • Compress the textures.

    It is recommended to create the uncompressed folder in your project's textures folder to store uncompressed textures. Use special postfixes to allow imagedds script to compress your textures automatically, or use ImageDDS tool for custom compression.

    • my_project - a folder for your project.
      • textures - a folder for compressed textures.
        • uncompressed - a separate folder to store your source uncompressed textures. You should put them into this folder.
  • Compress the terrain textures. Also, read here about terrain optimization.
  • Use small size for one-colored textures.

Reflections

This section contains tips for optimization of reflection usage.

  • Keep the number of reflections as low as possible. Each surface which has a reflection is rendered twice and that doubles the number of triangles and the number of draw calls.
  • Use reflection masks for the camera.

    To specify surfaces that will have reflection, do the following:

    1. Open the Camera Settings window.

    2. Specify the Reflection mask of the camera.

    3. In the Nodes windows, choose your node with exported LODs and specify the Viewport mask to enable the reflection of the surface.
  • Enable the Shared reflection option for child meshes of the one node with the same material.
  • Specify the global Reflection Distance parameter to set the distance when reflections are turned off.

    To specify the Reflection Distance parameter, open the Render Settings window by clicking Windows -> Render Settings on the Menu bar.

Light and Shadows

The following guidelines will increase your performance on shadows and lights:

  • World Light source illuminates all object on the scene thus increasing the number of calculations of shadows, so keep the number of World Light objects as low as possible. For most purposes other light sources (Projected Light, etc.) are more suitable in terms of project performance.
  • Use Light masks to specify what surfaces should be lighted.

    To specify the light mask of the light source, open the Nodes window by clicking Windows -> Nodes and choose your light source. In the Light tab specify the light mask.

    The specified lightmask of the Projected Light source.

    The light source will illuminate only those surface which light mask matches with the light source's light mask.

    Notice
    Read this article to know more about masks.
  • Specify Light Distance and Shadow Distance parameters of the light source. These parameters turn off lights and shadows rendering of an object when the camera is located at a given distance from this object.

    To set these parameters, do the following:

    1. Open the Nodes window by clicking Windows -> Nodes on the Menu bar.
    2. Choose a light source in the nodes hierarchy.
    3. Select the Light tab.
    4. Specify parameters of the light source.

  • Disable Cast\Receive shadow checkboxes for some surfaces (for example, the last LOD surface) or for materials.

    To disable these checkboxes, open the Nodes window (click Windows -> Nodes on the Menu bar or press N). Choose the node and open the Surfaces tab.

    Shadow parameters of the surface.

    To set shadow parameters of the material, open the Materials window (click Windows -> Materials on the Menu bar or press M). Choose the material and open the Common tab.

    Shadow parameters of the material.
  • Use lightmaps for static objects.
  • Be creative and think differently! For example, use billboards when you need only the visualization of the light source without illumination.

    In the Port Angeles demo we use billboards for takeoff runway lights. They don't produce any light, but look like real lights.

Culling

Object culling allows you not to render objects which are not presented in the viewing frustum

  • Export objects from 3D computer graphics software in local coordinates to make bounds of the mesh closer to geometry.
  • Use Sectors and Portals.
  • Use Occluders: world, mesh, terrain. Occluders can be highly effective in case of complex environments where there are many objects that occlude each other and are costly to render (they have a lot of polygons and/or heavy shaders).
Last update: 2017-07-03
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