Surface Shaders with DX11 Tessellation

Surface Shaders have some support for DirectX 11 GPU Tessellation. Idea is:

Current limitations of tessellation support:

No GPU tessellation, displacement in the vertex modifier

Let's start with a surface shader that does some displacement mapping without using tessellation. It just moves vertices along their normals based on amount coming from a displacement map:

    Shader "Tessellation Sample" {
        Properties {
            _MainTex ("Base (RGB)", 2D) = "white" {}
            _DispTex ("Disp Texture", 2D) = "gray" {}
            _NormalMap ("Normalmap", 2D) = "bump" {}
            _Displacement ("Displacement", Range(0, 1.0)) = 0.3
            _Color ("Color", color) = (1,1,1,0)
            _SpecColor ("Spec color", color) = (0.5,0.5,0.5,0.5)
        }
        SubShader {
            Tags { "RenderType"="Opaque" }
            LOD 300

            CGPROGRAM
            #pragma surface surf BlinnPhong addshadow fullforwardshadows vertex:disp nolightmap
            #pragma target 5.0

            struct appdata {
                float4 vertex : POSITION;
                float4 tangent : TANGENT;
                float3 normal : NORMAL;
                float2 texcoord : TEXCOORD0;
            };

            sampler2D _DispTex;
            float _Displacement;

            void disp (inout appdata v)
            {
                float d = tex2Dlod(_DispTex, float4(v.texcoord.xy,0,0)).r * _Displacement;
                v.vertex.xyz += v.normal * d;
            }

            struct Input {
                float2 uv_MainTex;
            };

            sampler2D _MainTex;
            sampler2D _NormalMap;
            fixed4 _Color;

            void surf (Input IN, inout SurfaceOutput o) {
                half4 c = tex2D (_MainTex, IN.uv_MainTex) * _Color;
                o.Albedo = c.rgb;
                o.Specular = 0.2;
                o.Gloss = 1.0;
                o.Normal = UnpackNormal(tex2D(_NormalMap, IN.uv_MainTex));
            }
            ENDCG
        }
        FallBack "Diffuse"
    }

The above shader is fairly standard, points of intetest:

Here's how some simple objects would look like with this shader:

Fixed amount of tessellation

Let's add fixed amount of tessellation, i.e. the same tessellation level for the whole mesh. This approach is suitable if your model's faces are roughly the same size on screen. Some script could then change the tessellation level from code, based on distance to the camera.

    Shader "Tessellation Sample" {
        Properties {
            _Tess ("Tessellation", Range(1,32)) = 4
            _MainTex ("Base (RGB)", 2D) = "white" {}
            _DispTex ("Disp Texture", 2D) = "gray" {}
            _NormalMap ("Normalmap", 2D) = "bump" {}
            _Displacement ("Displacement", Range(0, 1.0)) = 0.3
            _Color ("Color", color) = (1,1,1,0)
            _SpecColor ("Spec color", color) = (0.5,0.5,0.5,0.5)
        }
        SubShader {
            Tags { "RenderType"="Opaque" }
            LOD 300

            CGPROGRAM
            #pragma surface surf BlinnPhong addshadow fullforwardshadows vertex:disp tessellate:tessFixed nolightmap
            #pragma target 5.0

            struct appdata {
                float4 vertex : POSITION;
                float4 tangent : TANGENT;
                float3 normal : NORMAL;
                float2 texcoord : TEXCOORD0;
            };

            float _Tess;

            float4 tessFixed()
            {
                return _Tess;
            }

            sampler2D _DispTex;
            float _Displacement;

            void disp (inout appdata v)
            {
                float d = tex2Dlod(_DispTex, float4(v.texcoord.xy,0,0)).r * _Displacement;
                v.vertex.xyz += v.normal * d;
            }

            struct Input {
                float2 uv_MainTex;
            };

            sampler2D _MainTex;
            sampler2D _NormalMap;
            fixed4 _Color;

            void surf (Input IN, inout SurfaceOutput o) {
                half4 c = tex2D (_MainTex, IN.uv_MainTex) * _Color;
                o.Albedo = c.rgb;
                o.Specular = 0.2;
                o.Gloss = 1.0;
                o.Normal = UnpackNormal(tex2D(_NormalMap, IN.uv_MainTex));
            }
            ENDCG
        }
        FallBack "Diffuse"
    }

The tessellation function, tessFixed in our shader, returns four tessellation factors as a single float4 value: tree factors for each edge of the triangle, and one factor for the inside of the triangle. Here, we just return a constant value that is set in material properties.

Distance-based tessellation

We can also change tessellation level based on distance from the camera. For example, we could define two distance values; distance at which tessellation is at maximum (say, 10 meters), and distance towards which tessellation level gradually decreases (say, 20 meters).

    Shader "Tessellation Sample" {
        Properties {
            _Tess ("Tessellation", Range(1,32)) = 4
            _MainTex ("Base (RGB)", 2D) = "white" {}
            _DispTex ("Disp Texture", 2D) = "gray" {}
            _NormalMap ("Normalmap", 2D) = "bump" {}
            _Displacement ("Displacement", Range(0, 1.0)) = 0.3
            _Color ("Color", color) = (1,1,1,0)
            _SpecColor ("Spec color", color) = (0.5,0.5,0.5,0.5)
        }
        SubShader {
            Tags { "RenderType"="Opaque" }
            LOD 300

            CGPROGRAM
            #pragma surface surf BlinnPhong addshadow fullforwardshadows vertex:disp tessellate:tessDistance nolightmap
            #pragma target 5.0
            #include "Tessellation.cginc"

            struct appdata {
                float4 vertex : POSITION;
                float4 tangent : TANGENT;
                float3 normal : NORMAL;
                float2 texcoord : TEXCOORD0;
            };

            float _Tess;

            float4 tessDistance (appdata v0, appdata v1, appdata v2) {
                float minDist = 10.0;
                float maxDist = 25.0;
                return UnityDistanceBasedTess(v0.vertex, v1.vertex, v2.vertex, minDist, maxDist, _Tess);
            }

            sampler2D _DispTex;
            float _Displacement;

            void disp (inout appdata v)
            {
                float d = tex2Dlod(_DispTex, float4(v.texcoord.xy,0,0)).r * _Displacement;
                v.vertex.xyz += v.normal * d;
            }

            struct Input {
                float2 uv_MainTex;
            };

            sampler2D _MainTex;
            sampler2D _NormalMap;
            fixed4 _Color;

            void surf (Input IN, inout SurfaceOutput o) {
                half4 c = tex2D (_MainTex, IN.uv_MainTex) * _Color;
                o.Albedo = c.rgb;
                o.Specular = 0.2;
                o.Gloss = 1.0;
                o.Normal = UnpackNormal(tex2D(_NormalMap, IN.uv_MainTex));
            }
            ENDCG
        }
        FallBack "Diffuse"
    }

Here the tessellation function takes three parameters; the vertex data of three triangle corners before tessellation. This is needed to compute tessellation levels, which depend on vertex positions now. We include a built-in helper file Tessellation.cginc and call UnityDistanceBasedTess function from it to do all the work. That function computes distance of each vertex to the camera and derives final tessellation factors.

Edge length based tessellation

Purely distance based tessellation is good only when triangle sizes are quite similar. In the image above, you can see that objects that have small triangles are tessellated too much, while objects that have large triangles aren't tessellated enough.

Instead, tessellation levels could be computed based on triangle edge length on the screen - the longer the edge, the larger tessellation factor should be applied.

    Shader "Tessellation Sample" {
        Properties {
            _EdgeLength ("Edge length", Range(2,50)) = 15
            _MainTex ("Base (RGB)", 2D) = "white" {}
            _DispTex ("Disp Texture", 2D) = "gray" {}
            _NormalMap ("Normalmap", 2D) = "bump" {}
            _Displacement ("Displacement", Range(0, 1.0)) = 0.3
            _Color ("Color", color) = (1,1,1,0)
            _SpecColor ("Spec color", color) = (0.5,0.5,0.5,0.5)
        }
        SubShader {
            Tags { "RenderType"="Opaque" }
            LOD 300

            CGPROGRAM
            #pragma surface surf BlinnPhong addshadow fullforwardshadows vertex:disp tessellate:tessEdge nolightmap
            #pragma target 5.0
            #include "Tessellation.cginc"

            struct appdata {
                float4 vertex : POSITION;
                float4 tangent : TANGENT;
                float3 normal : NORMAL;
                float2 texcoord : TEXCOORD0;
            };

            float _EdgeLength;

            float4 tessEdge (appdata v0, appdata v1, appdata v2)
            {
                return UnityEdgeLengthBasedTess (v0.vertex, v1.vertex, v2.vertex, _EdgeLength);
            }

            sampler2D _DispTex;
            float _Displacement;

            void disp (inout appdata v)
            {
                float d = tex2Dlod(_DispTex, float4(v.texcoord.xy,0,0)).r * _Displacement;
                v.vertex.xyz += v.normal * d;
            }

            struct Input {
                float2 uv_MainTex;
            };

            sampler2D _MainTex;
            sampler2D _NormalMap;
            fixed4 _Color;

            void surf (Input IN, inout SurfaceOutput o) {
                half4 c = tex2D (_MainTex, IN.uv_MainTex) * _Color;
                o.Albedo = c.rgb;
                o.Specular = 0.2;
                o.Gloss = 1.0;
                o.Normal = UnpackNormal(tex2D(_NormalMap, IN.uv_MainTex));
            }
            ENDCG
        }
        FallBack "Diffuse"
    }

Here again, we just call UnityEdgeLengthBasedTess function from Tessellation.cginc to do all the actual work.

For performance reasons, it's advisable to call UnityEdgeLengthBasedTessCull function instead, which will do patch frustum culling. This makes the shader a bit more expensive, but saves a lot of GPU work for parts of meshes that are outside of camera's view.

Phong Tessellation

Phong Tessellation modifies positions of the subdivided faces so that the resulting surface follows the mesh normals a bit. It's quite an effective way of making low-poly meshes become more smooth.

Unity's surface shaders can compute Phong tessellation automatically using tessphong:VariableName compilation directive. Here's an example shader:

    Shader "Phong Tessellation" {
        Properties {
            _EdgeLength ("Edge length", Range(2,50)) = 5
            _Phong ("Phong Strengh", Range(0,1)) = 0.5
            _MainTex ("Base (RGB)", 2D) = "white" {}
            _Color ("Color", color) = (1,1,1,0)
        }
        SubShader {
            Tags { "RenderType"="Opaque" }
            LOD 300

            CGPROGRAM
            #pragma surface surf Lambert vertex:dispNone tessellate:tessEdge tessphong:_Phong nolightmap
            #include "Tessellation.cginc"

            struct appdata {
                float4 vertex : POSITION;
                float3 normal : NORMAL;
                float2 texcoord : TEXCOORD0;
            };

            void dispNone (inout appdata v) { }

            float _Phong;
            float _EdgeLength;

            float4 tessEdge (appdata v0, appdata v1, appdata v2)
            {
                return UnityEdgeLengthBasedTess (v0.vertex, v1.vertex, v2.vertex, _EdgeLength);
            }

            struct Input {
                float2 uv_MainTex;
            };

            fixed4 _Color;
            sampler2D _MainTex;

            void surf (Input IN, inout SurfaceOutput o) {
                half4 c = tex2D (_MainTex, IN.uv_MainTex) * _Color;
                o.Albedo = c.rgb;
                o.Alpha = c.a;
            }

            ENDCG
        }
        FallBack "Diffuse"
    }

Here's a comparison between regular shader (top row) and one that uses Phong tessellation (bottom row). You can see that even without any displacement mapping, the surface becomes more round.

Page last updated: 2012-09-18