Shader Compilation Target Levels
Shading Language used in Unity
In Unity, shader programs are written in a variant of HLSL language (also called Cg but for most practical uses the two are the same).
Currently, for maximum portability between different platforms, writing in DX9-style HLSL (e.g. use DX9 style sampler2D
and tex2D
for texture sampling instead of DX10 style Texture2D
, SamplerState
and tex.Sample
).
Shader Compilers
Internally, different shader compilers are used for shader program compilation:
- Windows & Microsoft platforms (DX9, DX11, DX12 and Xbox One) all use Microsoft’s
HLSL compiler (currently d3dcompiler_47).
- OpenGL Core, OpenGL ES 3 and Metal use Microsoft’s HLSL followed by bytecode translation into GLSL or Metal,
using HLSLcc.
- OpenGL ES 2.0 uses source level translation via
hlsl2glslfork and glsl optimizer.
- Other console platforms use their respective compilers (e.g. PSSL on PS4).
-
Surface Shaders use Cg 2.2 and MojoShader for code generation analysis step.
In case you really need to identify which compiler is being used (to use HLSL syntax only supported by one compiler, or to work around a compiler bug), predefined shader macros can be used. For example, UNITY_COMPILER_HLSL
is set when compiling with HLSL compiler (for D3D or GLCore/GLES3 platforms); and UNITY_COMPILER_HLSL2GLSL
when compiling via hlsl2glsl.
See Also
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Shader Compilation Target Levels