Difference between revisions of "Materials in Oolite"
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Revision as of 22:07, 10 February 2012
- This page applies to Oolite test releases.
Traditionally, the surface appearance of ships in Oolite has been defined entirely by textures specified in the ship’s model file and the smooth attribute. Test release 1.67 added support for shaders, and test release 1.69 expanded this to a more flexible material model. Under the new model, the texture file names in model files have been repurposed as material keys. A material key specifies an entry in the ship’s material dictionary, specified in the ship’s shipdata.plist entry. For backwards compatibility, if no material of a given name is found, a material is generated using the material key as a diffuse texture name – providing the same functionality as previous versions of Oolite.
This page documents the material model as of Oolite test release 1.74.
Important concepts
The following concepts are important in understanding how materials work and how they interact with lights.
- Colour: Oolite uses a basic low dynamic range lighting model. Colours are considered to be lists of three values, representing red, green and blue colours, each ranging from 0 to 1. These are often encoded as integers ranging from 0 to 255 for technical reasons, but 0 to 1 is the true range of values. There may also be an associated alpha channel, which is traditionally used for blending effects. In shaders, any colour channel can be used for any purpose, and textures often encode values that are not treated as colours.
- Fragment: roughty speaking, an on-screen pixel. When objects are rendered, their geometry is used to generate a fragments, which are then coloured based on lighting and materials.
- Modulation: multiplying two colours together, by channel. For instance, if the calculated light colour for a given fragment is pale yellow – [1, 1, 0.8] – and the corresponding part of the diffuse map is turquoise – [0.2, 0.8, 0.8] – the diffuse contribution is [0.2, 0.8, 0.64] (a greenish tint). In graphics programs, this blending mode is usually called Multiply.
- Additive blending: adding two colours together, by channel. In Oolite’s low dynamic range lighting model, the result is always clipped to the range 0..1. In graphics programs, this blending mode is usually called Lighten.
- Normals: All lighting calculations require a concept of the orientation of a surface relative to a light and, for reflections, relative to the camera. A surface oriented towards the light will be lighter than a surface oriented away from it. The normal for any given point on a surface is a vector pointing straight out, which for our purposes defines the concept of “straight out”.
By default, Oolite models have constant normals across each face. By setting thesmooth
attribute in shipdata.plist, normals are instead interpolated across each face, with each vertex having a normal that is a weighted average of surounding faces’ normals, and each point on a surface getting a weighted average of the normals at the corners of the face. Using smooth groups, a model can be divided into regions which are smoothed but have sharp boundaries between them. As of Oolite 1.74, models can also include explicit per-vertex normals instead of having Oolite calculate them – most 3D modellers export this information.
When using smoothing, it is important to understand that Oolite does not add any geometry,and will result in each vertex being lit as if it is locally flat. This is generally inappropriate for any sharp corner. If you setsmooth
on a basic cube, the result will be badly lit. - Diffuse reflection: light that is reflected evenly in all directions. A “dull” surface primarily reflects diffusely. Because the light is reflected evenly in all directions, the diffuse term is independent of the camera position; it is a function of the light and the surface normal. The standard diffuse reflection term is the cosine of the angle between the direction to the light and the normal, or zero if this is negative – this is known as the Lambertian reflectance model. This value is then modulated with the material’s diffuse colour and diffuse map.
- Specular reflection: light that is reflected in a particular direction, producing a shiny effect. In real life, this is simply a mirror reflection which is generally darkened and blurred, leaving an enlarged, blurry reflection of bright light sources, with other objects being washed out so they aren’t noticeable. In Oolite, a simpler mathematical model called the Blinn-Phong shading model is used.
This video demonstrates the effects of specular lighting and specular mapping on the built-in scarred alloy model.
The material dictionary
The material dictionary is actually specified as two separate dictionaries in the shipdata.plist entry. The first is called materials, the second shaders. If shader support is available and enabled, the entries in shaders are used in preference to those in materials. Otherwise, shaders is ignored. The entries in the two dictionaries take exactly the same form, however; it is possible to specify a shader in the materials dictionary, and it will simply be ignored if shader support is not available. The materials and shaders dictionaries, merged together, are known as a material dictionary.
Material specifiers
The material dictionary is a property list dictionary whose keys are material keys as defined below, and whose values are material specifiers, which are either dictionaries or strings. When a string is used as a material specifier, it is equivalent to a dictionary with that string as the value for diffuse_map, and no other properties. Currently-supported material specifier keys are listed here; “texture specifier” and similar are defined below.
Most of these keys have no effect when a custom shader is in effect.
When shaders are disabled or not available, emission and illumination maps are supported only if reduced detail is disabled and the graphics hardware supports multi-texturing. If emission_modulate_color, illumination_map, or emission_and_illumination_map are used, Oolite must combine them into a single emission map. It is generally preferable to do this in advance (by modulating the illumination map with the diffuse map and blending it additively with the emission map, after applying any colouring). This is more efficient when using shaders, too.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
ambient_color | colour specifier | The ambient colour of the entity, that is, the colour reflected evenly in all directions by starlight. If there is a diffuse_map, the ambient_color is modulated by the diffuse_map. Default: white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0). |
diffuse_color | colour specifier | Overall diffuse colour of the entity; that is, the colour reflected in a “non-shiny” way on the sunlit side of the entity. If there is a diffuse_map, the diffuse_color is modulated by the diffuse_map. Default: white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0). |
diffuse_map | texture specifier | A texture specifying the basic colour of the material. This is a “normal” texture, the same as you get without a material dictionary. If not specified, the material key will be used. To specify no texture, use an empty string for diffuse_map. Ignored when using shaders. |
emission_color | colour specifier | The emitted (glow) colour of the material. This is ignored when emission_map is in use (but see also: emission_modulate_color). Default: black (0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0). |
emission_map | texture specifier | A texture specifying emission (glow) colours. This is blended additively with all other colour terms. If emission_modulate_color is specified, the emission map is modulated by the modulate colour. Emission maps are used when shaders are active, and without shaders on supported hardware. |
emission_modulate_color | colour specifier | A colour with which to modulate the emission_map. If the emission map is in full colour, it is best to apply the colouring in advance using a graphics program. However, if the emission map is a single colour, using a greyscale emission map and a modulate colour will reduce memory usage by a factor of four when shaders are in use. Default: white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0). |
emission_and_illumination_map | texture specifier | A texture whose RGB channels act like emission_map, and whose alpha channel acts like illumination_map (and can be coloured with illumination_modulate_color). This uses less memory (on systems with shaders) than using separate shaders, although blending the emission and illumination maps into a single emission map, as described above, is still preferable. |
illumination_map | texture specifier | A texture specifying local illumination colour, which is added to incoming light. It differs from an emission map in that it is modulated with the diffuse colour before being added to the final colour. See example below. |
illumination_modulate_color | colour specifier | A colour with which to modulate the illumination_map. Default: white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0). |
normal_map | texture specifier | A texture modifying normals. The red, green and blue channels are the x, y and z coordinates of normals relative to the underlying normal (“tangent-space normal mapping”), and the alpha channel is ingored. This is only used when shaders are active and no custom shader is used. |
normal_and_parallax_map | texture specifier | Like normal_map, except that the alpha channel is includes a depth value used to add simulated perspective. If specified, normal_map is ignored. |
parallax_bias | number | A value added to the parallax component of normal_and_parallax_map, after multiplying by parallax_scale (default: 0). |
parallax_scale | number | A scale factor for the parallax component of normal_and_parallax_map (default: 0.01). This value is the depth of the parallax map relative to the size of the texture. For instance, a value of 0.01 on a texture 100 metres wide will produce a maximum indentation of 1 metre. High parallax_scale values tend to lead to unacceptable texture distortion and “creeping” artefacts. |
specular_color | colour specifier | The colour to use for specular reflection over the entire model when specular_map is not used. The specular term is added to the diffuse term; for less intense specular highlights, use a darker colour. Default: black (0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0) if shininess is zero, (0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 1.0) otherwise. |
specular_map | texture specifier | A texture specifying the specular highlight colour in its red, green and blue channels, and shininess in its alpha channel. 1 (fully opaque) means the value of shininess is used. 0 means a very low shininess is used. This is only used when shaders are active and no custom shader is used. |
specular_modulate_color | colour specifier | A colour with which to modulate the specular_map. Default: white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0, 1.0). |
shininess | integer | The “tightness” of specular reflection, ranging from 0 to 128. 0 means no specular highlight. 128 is maximally shiny. Default: 128 if specular_map is used, 10 otherwise. Limitation: to use different shininess values with specular_map or specular_color, you must either use the default or use different “shaders” and “materials” dictionaries. This should be fixed for 1.75. |
vertex_shader | file name | name of GLSL vertex program to use. |
fragment_shader | file name | name of GLSL fragment program to use. |
textures | array of texture specifiers | Textures to use in shader program. |
uniforms | dictionary of uniform variable specifiers | uniform variables to use in shader program. |
Illumination mapping vs. emission mapping
This image demonstrates the distinction between illumination mapping (top row) and emission mapping (bottom row).
Colour specifiers
Colour specifiers are used to declare colours in material attribute dictionaries, and in other contexts such as lasers in shipdata.plist. Colour specifiers take any of several forms:
Named colours
The simplest form of colour specifier is a string containing a colour name. The following names are supported:
Name | RGBA value |
---|---|
blackColor | 0, 0, 0, 1 |
darkGrayColor | 1/3, 1/3, 1/3, 1 |
lightGrayColor | 2/3, 2/3, 2/3, 1 |
whiteColor | 1, 1, 1, 1 |
grayColor | 1/2, 1/2, 1/2, 1 |
redColor | 1, 0, 0, 1 |
greenColor | 0, 1, 0, 1 |
blueColor | 0, 0, 1, 1 |
cyanColor | 0, 1, 1, 1 |
yellowColor | 1, 1, 0, 1 |
magentaColor | 1, 0, 1, 1 |
orangeColor | 1, 1/2, 0, 1 |
purpleColor | 1/2, 0, 1/2, 1 |
brownColor | 0.6, 0.4, 0.2, 1 |
clearColor | 0, 0, 0, 0 |
RGBA tuples
Colours may also be specified in RGB or RGBA (red, green, blue, alpha [transparency]). RGB or RGBA tuples may be specified as arrays or as strings separated by spaces. The values may range from 0 to 1 or 0 to 255. (If no value is greater than 1, 0–1 is assumed, otherwise 0–255.) Examples:
"1 1 0"
— yellow"0 128 0 128"
— medium green at 50% opacity(1, 0, 0)
– red
RGBA dictionaries
Just in case you’re unsure of the order the RGB[A] components come in, you can use a dictionary:
{ blue = 0.8; green = 0.8; }
Accepted keys are red, green, blue and alpha (or opacity), all optional (default: 0.0 for red, green and blue, 1.0 for alpha).
HSBA dictionaries
But wait, there’s more! Colours may also be specified as dictionaries in the HSB colour space. Accepted keys are hue (hue angle in degrees, required), saturation, brightness (or value) and alpha (or opacity). The default for the optional keys is 1.0.
{ // Pale magenta hue = 300; saturation = 0.3; }
Texture specifiers
Texture specifiers are used to, er, specify textures. The simplest form of texture specifier is a string: "ahruman-example-texture.png"
. The very simplest texture specifier is the empty string, ""
, meaning no texture. More complex texture specifiers are dictionaries, which can be used to specify a number of texture options.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
anisotropy | real | The degree of anisotropic filtering to use. Anisotropic filtering is used to reduce blurriness of MIP mapped textures shown at an angle (and thus only applies to textures whose min_filter is mipmap or default). The anisotropy setting is multiplied by the maximum anisotropy level specified by the system, and anisotropic filtering is used only if the result is greater than 1. (For example, on a GeForce FX 5200 card, the maximum level is 8, so an anisotropy value of 0.5 means an effective anisotropic filtering strength of 4. The precise meaning of this number is hardware-dependant. Fun, eh?) Anisotropic filtering is disabled in Reduced Detail mode and is not available on all hardware. Default: 0.5. |
cube_map | boolean | If this is true, and the texture file is six times as high as it is wide, the texture will be treated as a cube map. If cube maps are not supported, it will be converted to a latitude/longitude map; if used as a diffuse map or emission/illumination map, you must ensure the model has appropriate texture coordinates. Note that cube maps are always available if shaders are supported, so custom shaders do not need to worry about this.
cube_map is always true for planet textures. To convert textures to and from cube maps, see planettool. |
extract_channel | string | Indicates that one of the channels of the texture should be extracted into a new greyscale texture. Allowed values: r, g, b and a.
This obviously involves extra work for Oolite, which is always a bad thing, but it makes it possible to combine multiple effect maps in a single texture for shaders and then extract channels for use as emission or illumination maps without shipping a redundant texture. If this means nothing to you, you probably don’t want to use extract_channel. |
mag_filter | string | Specifies how to scale up the texture when it is near the camera. Either of:
Default: linear. |
min_filter | string | Specifies how to scale down the texture when it is far from the camera. One of:
Default: default. |
name | string | The file name of the texture to use. Must be a PNG image, in the Textures folder of Oolite or an OXP. In the specific case of diffuse_map textures, name is implicitly the same as the material key; to use no texture, you must specify diffuse_map = "" .
|
no_shrink | boolean | Indicates that Oolite should not scale the texture down, except to meet hardware requirements. Default: false. |
repeat_s | boolean | Whether Oolite should repeat the texture in the s (or u) co-ordinate, rather than clamping it. Default: false. |
repeat_t | boolean | Whether Oolite should repeat the texture in the t (or v) co-ordinate, rather than clamping it. Default: false. |
texture_LOD_bias | real | tweak factor for MIP mapping (which does not apply to other min_filter modes). MIP mapping involves a trade-off between scaling artefacts and blurriness; the LOD (level of detail) bias affects this. Positive values mean more blur, negative ones mean more artefacts. The default value is −0.25 (mostly so people won’t say “hey, why is everything blurrier in the new Oolite?”). Texture LOD bias is not available on all hardware. |
Uniform specifiers
- Main article: Shaders in Oolite: uniforms
A uniform specifier is used to specify game information to pass to a shader program. As with texture specifiers, the simple case is a string, which is treated as { binding = "the string" }
. For instance, uHullHeatLevel = hullHeatLevel will bind a shader’s uHullHeatLevel
uniform to a ship’s hullHeatLevel
property. Additional properties can be specified in a dictionary.
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
asMatrix | boolean | For a binding uniform whose bound property is of type quaternion, setting asMatrix to true causes the value to be converted to a rotation matrix. If asMatrix is false, the quaternion will be converted to a vector, whose w, x, y and z values match those of the quaternion. For any other type of uniform, asMatrix is ignored. Default: true. |
binding | string | The entity property to bind to, for a binding uniform. Ignored for other types of uniform. |
clamped | boolean | For a binding uniform whose bound property is of type float, setting clamped to true causes the value to be restricted to the range 0 to 1, inclusive. For a binding of type int, causes the value to be set to either 0 or 1; 1 indicates that the underlying property has any value other than 0. For any other type of uniform, clamped is ignored. Default: false. |
normalized | boolean | For a binding uniform whose bound property is of type vector, setting normalized to true causes the value to be normalized, that is, scaled to a length of 1. For any other type of uniform, normalized is ignored. The spelling normalised is also accepted. Default: false. |
type | string | One of:
Default: float. |
value | number | The value to use for a float, int or texture uniform. Ignored for binding uniforms. |
Material dictionary example
Here is an example from the Material Test Suite OXP:
materials = { "cube-face" = { diffuse_map = "oolite_shader_test_suite_7_diffuse.png"; emission_and_illumination_map = "oolite_shader_test_suite_emission_and_illumination.png"; emission_modulate_color = (160, 255, 160); illumination_modulate_color = (180, 180, 200); }; };
Here, the “cube-face” material is assigned the diffuse texture “oolite_shader_test_suite_7_diffuse.png” and a combined emission and illumination map (which is a greyscale+alpha texture). The emission and illumination components are then given coloured tints (slightly green and slightly blue, respectively), producing this:
See also
- Material Test Suite OXP — demonstrates most material properties.