PySide6.QtGui.QRhiColorAttachment

class QRhiColorAttachment

Describes the a single color attachment of a render target.

Details

A color attachment is either a QRhiTexture or a QRhiRenderBuffer . The former, i.e. when texture() is set, is used in most cases. QRhiColorAttachment is commonly used in combination with QRhiTextureRenderTargetDescription .

Note

texture() and renderBuffer() cannot be both set (be non-null at the same time).

Setting renderBuffer instead is recommended only when multisampling is needed. Relying on MultisampleRenderBuffer is a better choice than MultisampleTexture in practice since the former is available in more run time configurations (e.g. when running on OpenGL ES 3.0 which has no support for multisample textures, but does support multisample renderbuffers).

When targeting a non-multisample texture, the layer() and level() indicate the targeted layer (face index 0-5 for cubemaps) and mip level. For 3D textures layer() specifies the slice (one 2D image within the 3D texture) to render to. For texture arrays layer() is the array index.

When texture() or renderBuffer() is multisample, resolveTexture() can be set optionally. When set, samples are resolved automatically into that (non-multisample) texture at the end of the render pass. When rendering into a multisample renderbuffers, this is the only way to get resolved, non-multisample content out of them. Multisample textures allow sampling in shaders so for them this is just one option.

Note

when resolving is enabled, the multisample data may not be written out at all. This means that the multisample texture() must not be used afterwards with shaders for sampling when resolveTexture() is set.

Note

This is a RHI API with limited compatibility guarantees, see QRhi for details.

Added in version 6.6.

Synopsis

Methods

Note

This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE

__init__()

Constructs an empty color attachment description.

__init__(renderBuffer)
Parameters:

renderBufferQRhiRenderBuffer

Constructs a color attachment description that specifies renderBuffer as the associated color buffer.

__init__(texture)
Parameters:

textureQRhiTexture

Constructs a color attachment description that specifies texture as the associated color buffer.

layer()
Return type:

int

Returns the layer index (cubemap face or array layer). 0 by default.

See also

setLayer()

level()
Return type:

int

Returns the mip level. 0 by default.

See also

setLevel()

multiViewCount()
Return type:

int

Returns the currently set number of views. Defaults to 0 which indicates the render target with this color attachment is not going to be used with multiview rendering.

renderBuffer()
Return type:

QRhiRenderBuffer

Returns the renderbuffer this attachment description references, or None if there is none.

In practice associating a QRhiRenderBuffer with a QRhiColorAttachment makes the most sense when setting up multisample rendering via a multisample color renderbuffer that is then resolved into a non-multisample texture at the end of the render pass.

resolveLayer()
Return type:

int

Returns the currently set resolve texture layer. Defaults to 0.

resolveLevel()
Return type:

int

Returns the currently set resolve texture mip level. Defaults to 0.

resolveTexture()
Return type:

QRhiTexture

Returns the resolve texture this attachment description references, or None if there is none.

Setting a non-null resolve texture is applicable when the attachment references a multisample texture or renderbuffer. The QRhiTexture in the resolveTexture() is then a non-multisample 2D texture (or texture array) with the same size (but a sample count of 1). The multisample content is automatically resolved into this texture at the end of each render pass.

setLayer(layer)
Parameters:

layer – int

Sets the layer index.

See also

layer()

setLevel(level)
Parameters:

level – int

Sets the mip level.

See also

level()

setMultiViewCount(count)
Parameters:

count – int

Sets the view count. Setting a value larger than 1 indicates that the render target with this color attachment is going to be used with multiview rendering. The default value is 0. Values smaller than 2 indicate no multiview rendering.

When count is set to 2 or greater, the color attachment must be associated with a 2D texture array. layer() and multiViewCount() together define the range of texture array elements that are targeted during multiview rendering.

For example, if layer is 0 and multiViewCount is 2, the texture array must have 2 (or more) elements, and the multiview rendering will target elements 0 and 1. The gl_ViewIndex variable in the shaders has a value of 0 or 1 then, where view 0 corresponds to the texture array element 0, and view 1 to the array element 1.

Note

Setting a count larger than 1, using a texture array as texture() , and calling beginPass() on a QRhiTextureRenderTarget with this color attachment implies multiview rendering for the entire render pass. multiViewCount() should not be set unless multiview rendering is wanted. Multiview cannot be used with texture types other than 2D texture arrays. (although 3D textures may work, depending on the graphics API and backend; applications are nonetheless advised not to rely on that and only use 2D texture arrays as the render targets of multiview rendering)

See GL_OVR_multiview for more details regarding multiview rendering. Do note that Qt requires GL_OVR_multiview2 as well, when running on OpenGL (ES).

Multiview rendering is available only when the MultiView feature is reported as supported from isFeatureSupported() .

Note

For portability, be aware of limitations that exist for multiview rendering with some of the graphics APIs. It is recommended that multiview render passes do not rely on any of the features that GL_OVR_multiview declares as unsupported. The one exception is shader stage outputs other than gl_Position depending on gl_ViewIndex: that can be relied on (even with OpenGL) because QRhi never reports multiview as supported without GL_OVR_multiview2 also being present.

Note

Multiview rendering is not supported in combination with tessellation or geometry shaders, even though some implementations of some graphics APIs may allow this.

See also

multiViewCount()

setRenderBuffer(rb)
Parameters:

rbQRhiRenderBuffer

Sets the renderbuffer rb.

Note

texture() and renderBuffer() cannot be both set (be non-null at the same time).

See also

renderBuffer()

setResolveLayer(layer)
Parameters:

layer – int

Sets the resolve texture layer to use.

See also

resolveLayer()

setResolveLevel(level)
Parameters:

level – int

Sets the resolve texture mip level to use.

See also

resolveLevel()

setResolveTexture(tex)
Parameters:

texQRhiTexture

Sets the resolve texture tex.

tex is expected to be a 2D texture or a 2D texture array. In either case, resolving targets a single mip level of a single layer (array element) of tex. The mip level and array layer are specified by resolveLevel() and resolveLayer() .

An exception is multiview : when the color attachment is associated with a texture array and multiview is enabled, the resolve texture must also be a texture array with sufficient elements for all views. In this case all elements that correspond to views are resolved automatically; the behavior is similar to the following pseudo-code:

for (i = 0; i < multiViewCount(); ++i)
    resolve texture's layer() + i into resolveTexture's resolveLayer() + i

Setting a non-multisample texture to resolve a multisample texture or renderbuffer automatically at the end of the render pass is often preferable to working with multisample textures (and not setting a resolve texture), because it avoids the need for writing dedicated fragment shaders that work exclusively with multisample textures (sampler2DMS, texelFetch, etc.), and rather allows using the same shader as one would if the attachment’s texture was not multisampled to begin with. This comes at the expense of an additional resource (the non-multisample tex).

See also

resolveTexture()

setTexture(tex)
Parameters:

texQRhiTexture

Sets the texture tex.

Note

texture() and renderBuffer() cannot be both set (be non-null at the same time).

See also

texture()

texture()
Return type:

QRhiTexture

Returns the texture this attachment description references, or None if there is none.

See also

setTexture()