Your first 3D shader
This tutorial will explain how to write a Spatial shader and will cover more topics than the CanvasItem tutorial.
Spatial shaders have more built-in functionality than CanvasItem shaders. The expectation with spatial shaders is that Godot has already provided the functionality for common use cases and all the user needs to do in the shader is set the proper parameters. This is especially true for a PBR (physically based rendering) workflow.
This is a two-part tutorial. In this first part we are going to go through how to make a simple terrain using vertex displacement from a heightmap in the vertex function. In the we are going to take the concepts from this tutorial and walk through how to set up custom materials in a fragment shader by writing an ocean water shader.
Note
This tutorial assumes some basic shader knowledge such as types (, float
, sampler2D
), and functions. If you are uncomfortable with these concepts it is best to get a gentle introduction from The Book of Shaders before completing this tutorial.
In 3D, objects are drawn using Meshes. Meshes are a resource type that store geometry (the shape of your object) and materials (the color and how the object reacts to light) in units called “surfaces”. A Mesh can have multiple surfaces, or just one. Typically, you would import a mesh from another program (e.g. Blender). But Godot also has a few that allow you to add basic geometry to a scene without importing Meshes.
There are multiple node types that you can use to draw a mesh. The main one is MeshInstance, but you can also use , MultiMeshes (with a ), or others.
Typically, a material is associated with a given surface in a mesh, but some nodes, like MeshInstance, allow you to override the material for a specific surface, or for all surfaces.
If you set a material on the surface or mesh itself, then all MeshInstances that share that mesh will share that material. However, if you want to reuse the same mesh across multiple mesh instances, but have different materials for each instance then you should set the material on the Meshinstance.
For this tutorial we will set our material on the mesh itself rather than taking advantage of the MeshInstance’s ability to override materials.
Setting up
Add a new node to your scene.
In the inspector tab beside “Mesh” click “[empty]“ and select “New PlaneMesh”. Then click on the image of a plane that appears.
This adds a PlaneMesh to our scene.
Then, in the viewport, click in the upper left corner on the button that says “Perspective”. A menu will appear. In the middle of the menu are options for how to display the scene. Select ‘Display Wireframe’.
This will allow you to see the triangles making up the plane.
Now set Subdivide Width
and Subdivide Depth
to 32
.
You can see that there are now many more triangles in the . This will give us more vertices to work with and thus allow us to add more detail.
PrimitiveMeshes, like PlaneMesh, only have one
surface, so instead of an array of materials there is only one. Click beside “Material” where it says “[empty]“ and select “New ShaderMaterial”. Then click the sphere that appears.
Now click beside “Shader” where it says “[empty]“ and select “New Shader”.
The shader editor should now pop up and you are ready to begin writing your first Spatial shader!
Notice how there is already error? This is because the shader editor reloads shaders on the fly. The first thing Godot shaders need is a declaration of what type of shader they are. We set the variable shader_type
to spatial
because this is a spatial shader.
We define the vertex shader like so:
void vertex() {
}
With nothing in the vertex()
function, Godot will use its default vertex shader. We can easily start to make changes by adding a single line:
void vertex() {
VERTEX.y += cos(VERTEX.x) * sin(VERTEX.z);
}
Adding this line, you should get an image like the one below.
Okay, let’s unpack this. The y
value of the VERTEX
is being increased. And we are passing the x
and z
components of the VERTEX
as arguments to cos
and sin
; that gives us a wave-like appearance across the x
and z
axes.
What we want to achieve is the look of little hills; after all. cos
and sin
already look kind of like hills. We do so by scaling the inputs to the cos
and sin
functions.
void vertex() {
VERTEX.y += cos(VERTEX.x * 4.0) * sin(VERTEX.z * 4.0);
}
This looks better, but it is still too spiky and repetitive, let’s make it a little more interesting.
Noise heightmap
Noise is a very popular tool for faking the look of terrain. Think of it as similar to the cosine function where you have repeating hills except, with noise, each hill has a different height.
Godot provides the resource for generating a noise texture that can be accessed from a shader.
To access a texture in a shader add the following code near the top of your shader, outside the vertex()
function.
This will allow you to send a noise texture to the shader. Now look in the inspector under your material. You should see a section called “Shader Params”. If you open it up, you’ll see a section called “noise”.
Click beside it where it says “[empty]“ and select “New NoiseTexture”. Then in your NoiseTexture click beside where it says “Noise” and select “New OpenSimplexNoise”.
OpenSimplexNoise is used by the NoiseTexture to
generate a heightmap.
Once you set it up and should look like this.
Now, access the noise texture using the texture()
function. texture()
takes a texture as the first argument and a for the position on the texture as the second argument. We use the x
and z
channels of VERTEX
to determine where on the texture to look up. Note that the PlaneMesh coordinates are within the [-1,1] range (for a size of 2), while the texture coordinates are within [0,1], so to normalize we divide by the size of the PlaneMesh 2.0 and add 0.5. texture()
returns a vec4
of the r, g, b, a
channels at the position. Since the noise texture is grayscale, all of the values are the same, so we can use any one of the channels as the height. In this case we’ll use the r
, or x
channel.
VERTEX.y += height;
Note: xyzw
is the same as rgba
in GLSL, so instead of texture().x
above, we could use texture().r
. See the #Vectors) for more details.
Using this code you can see the texture creates random looking hills.
Right now it is too spiky, we want to soften the hills a bit. To do that, we will use a uniform. You already used a uniform above to pass in the noise texture, now let’s learn how they work.
Uniform variables allow you to pass data from the game into the shader. They are very useful for controlling shader effects. Uniforms can be almost any datatype that can be used in the shader. To use a uniform, you declare it in your using the keyword uniform
.
Let’s make a uniform that changes the height of the terrain.
uniform float height_scale = 0.5;
Godot lets you initialize a uniform with a value; here, height_scale
is set to 0.5
. You can set uniforms from GDScript by calling the function set_shader_param()
on the material corresponding to the shader. The value passed from GDScript takes precedence over the value used to initialize it in the shader.
# called from the MeshInstance
mesh.material.set_shader_param("height_scale", 0.5)
Note
Remember that the string passed into set_shader_param()
must match the name of the uniform variable in the Shader. You can use the uniform variable anywhere inside your . Here, we will use it to set the height value instead of arbitrarily multiplying by 0.5
.
Now it looks much better.
Using uniforms, we can even change the value every frame to animate the height of the terrain. Combined with Tweens, this can be especially useful for simple animations.
Interacting with light
First, turn wireframe off. To do so, click in the upper-left of the Viewport again, where it says “Perspective”, and select “Display Normal”.
Note how the mesh color goes flat. This is because the lighting on it is flat. Let’s add a light!
First, we will add an OmniLight to the scene.
You can see the light affecting the terrain, but it looks odd. The problem is the light is affecting the terrain as if it were a flat plane. This is because the light shader uses the normals from the to calculate light.
The normals are stored in the Mesh, but we are changing the shape of the Mesh in the shader, so the normals are no longer correct. To fix this, we can recalculate the normals in the shader or use a normal texture that corresponds to our noise. Godot makes both easy for us.
You can calculate the new normal manually in the vertex function and then just set NORMAL
. With NORMAL
set, Godot will do all the difficult lighting calculations for us. We will cover this method in the next part of this tutorial, for now we will read normals from a texture.
Instead we will rely on the NoiseTexture again to calculate normals for us. We do that by passing in a second noise texture.
uniform sampler2D normalmap;
Set this second uniform texture to another NoiseTexture with another OpenSimplexNoise. But this time, check off “As Normalmap”.
Now, because this is a normalmap and not a per-vertex normal, we are going to assign it in the fragment()
function. The fragment()
function will be explained in more detail in the next part of this tutorial.
void fragment() {
}
When we have normals that correspond to a specific vertex we set NORMAL
, but if you have a normalmap that comes from a texture, set the normal using NORMALMAP
. This way Godot will handle the wrapping the texture around the mesh automatically.
Lastly, in order to ensure that we are reading from the same places on the noise texture and the normalmap texture, we are going to pass the position from the vertex()
function to the fragment()
function. We do that with varyings.
Above the vertex()
define a vec2
called tex_position
. And inside the vertex()
function assign VERTEX.xz
to tex_position
.
varying vec2 tex_position;
void vertex() {
...
tex_position = VERTEX.xz / 2.0 + 0.5;
float height = texture(noise, tex_position).x;
...
}
And now we can access tex_position
from the fragment()
function.
With the normals in place the light now reacts to the height of the mesh dynamically.
We can even drag the light around and the lighting will update automatically.
Here is the full code for this tutorial. You can see it is not very long as Godot handles most of the difficult stuff for you.
uniform float height_scale = 0.5;
uniform sampler2D noise;
uniform sampler2D normalmap;
varying vec2 tex_position;
void vertex() {
tex_position = VERTEX.xz / 2.0 + 0.5;
float height = texture(noise, tex_position).x;
VERTEX.y += height * height_scale;
}
void fragment() {
NORMALMAP = texture(normalmap, tex_position).xyz;
That is everything for this part. Hopefully, you now understand the basics of vertex shaders in Godot. In the next part of this tutorial we will write a fragment function to accompany this vertex function and we will cover a more advanced technique to turn this terrain into an ocean of moving waves.