positions | The array of world space positions used to evaluate the probes. |
lightProbes | The array where the resulting light probes are written to. |
occlusionProbes | The array where the resulting occlusion probes are written to. |
Calculate light probes and occlusion probes at the given world space positions.
If there are no probes baked in the scene, the ambient probe will be written to the lightProbes
array and Vector4
(1,1,1,1) will be written to the occlusionProbes
array.
ArgumentNullException is thrown if positions
is null
.
You can omit either lightProbes
or occlusionProbes
array by passing null
to the function, but you cannot omit both at the same time. If both arrays are omitted, an ArgumentException is thrown. lightProbes
and occlusionProbes
should be calculated together for better performance.
For the overload which takes arrays as arguments, the lightProbes
and occlusionProbes
must have at least the same number of elements as the positions
array.
For the overload which takes lists as arguments, the output lists will be resized to fit the size of the positions
array if there is not enough space in the given lists.
The returned probes may be further used for instanced rendering by copying them to a MaterialPropertyBlock object via MaterialPropertyBlock.CopySHCoefficientArraysFrom and MaterialPropertyBlock.CopyProbeOcclusionArrayFrom.
using UnityEngine;
// This script uses OnPreCull for the rendering. It is mandatory to put the script to a Camera object. // Make sure light probes are placed and baked in the scene. // Use Shadowmask mode and mixed lights to see occlusion probes approximating shadowness. [RequireComponent(typeof(Camera))] public class Simple : MonoBehaviour { public Material material;
private Matrix4x4[] transforms; private MaterialPropertyBlock properties; private Mesh cubeMesh;
void Start() { const int kCount = 100;
// Generate 100 random positions var positions = new Vector3[kCount]; for (int i = 0; i < kCount; ++i) positions[i] = new Vector3(Random.Range(-20.0f, 20.0f), Random.Range(-20.0f, 20.0f), Random.Range(-20.0f, 20.0f));
// Calculate probes at these positions var lightprobes = new UnityEngine.Rendering.SphericalHarmonicsL2[kCount]; var occlusionprobes = new Vector4[kCount]; LightProbes.CalculateInterpolatedLightAndOcclusionProbes(positions, lightprobes, occlusionprobes);
// Put them into the MPB properties = new MaterialPropertyBlock(); properties.CopySHCoefficientArraysFrom(lightprobes); properties.CopyProbeOcclusionArrayFrom(occlusionprobes);
// Compute the transforms list transforms = new Matrix4x4[kCount]; for (int i = 0; i < kCount; ++i) transforms[i] = Matrix4x4.Translate(positions[i]);
// Create the cube mesh cubeMesh = GameObject.CreatePrimitive(PrimitiveType.Cube).GetComponent<MeshFilter>().sharedMesh;
// Make sure the material property is assigned if (material == null || !material.enableInstancing) Debug.LogError("material must be assigned with one with instancing enabled."); }
// OnPreCull happens before every culling, which is the perfect timing to inject DrawMesh* function calls. void OnPreCull() { if (material != null && material.enableInstancing) { var lightProbeUsage = UnityEngine.Rendering.LightProbeUsage.CustomProvided; // enable instancing for probes Graphics.DrawMeshInstanced(cubeMesh, 0, material, transforms, transforms.Length, properties, UnityEngine.Rendering.ShadowCastingMode.On, true, 0, null, lightProbeUsage); } } }
The example demonstrates how to leverage the baked light probes to enhance the visual quality of instanced rendering.
Did you find this page useful? Please give it a rating: