Shaders are assets that contain code and instructions for the graphics card to execute. Materials reference shaders, and setup their parameters (textures, colors and so on).
Unity contains some built-in shaders that are always available in your project (for example, the Standard shader). You can also write your own shaders and apply post-processing effects.
To create a new Shader, use Assets > Create > Shader from the main menu or the Project View context menu. A shader is a text file similar to a C# script, and is written in a combination of Cg/HLSL and ShaderLab languages (see writing shaders page for details).
This inspector section allows specifying default textures for a shader. Whenever a new Material is created with this shader, these textures are automatically assigned.
The Shader Inspector displays basic information about the shader (mostly shader tags), and allows compiling and inspecting low-level compiled code.
For Surface Shaders, the Show generated code button displays all the code that Unity generates to handle lighting and shadowing. If you really want to customize the generated code, you can just copy and paste all of it back to your original shader file and start tweaking.
The pop-up menu of the Compile and show code button allows inspecting final compiled shader code (e.g. assembly on Direct3D9, or low-level optimized GLSL for OpenGL ES) for selected platforms. This is mostly useful while optimizing shaders for performance; often you do want to know how many low-level instructions here generated in the end.
The low-level generated code is useful for pasting into GPU shader performance analysis tools (like AMD GPU ShaderAnalyzer or PVRShaderEditor).
On shader import time, Unity does not compile the whole shader. This is because majority of shaders have a lot of variants inside, and compiling all of them, for all possible platforms, would take a very long time. Instead, this is done:
At player build time, all the “not yet compiled” shader variants are compiled, so that they are in the game data even if the editor did not happen to use them.
However, this does mean that a shader might have an error in there, which is not detected at shader import time. For example, you’re running editor using Direct3D 11, but a shader has an error if compiled for OpenGL. Or some variants of the shader does not fit into shader model 2.0 instruction limits, etc. These errors will be shown in the inspector if editor needs them; but it’s also a good practice to manually fully compile the shader for platforms you need, to check for errors. This can be done using the Compile and show code pop-up menu in the shader inspector.
Shader compilation is carried out using a background process named UnityShaderCompiler
that is started by Unity
whenever it needs to compile shaders. Multiple compiler processes can be started (generally one per CPU
core in your machine), so that at player build time shader compilation can be done in parallel. While the
editor is not compiling shaders, the compiler processes do nothing and do not consume computer resources,
so there’s no need to worry about them. They are also shut down when Unity editor quits.
Individual shader variant compilation results are cached in the project, under Library/ShaderCache
folder.
This means that 100% identical shaders or their snippets will reuse previously compiled results. It also
means that the shader cache folder can become quite large, if you have a lot of shaders that are changed
often. It is always safe to delete it; it will just cause shader variants to be recompiled.
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