I am new to OpenGL and currently working on a particle system which makes use of the compute shader. I've got two questions. The first is about the compute shader itself. I create the particles and store them in shader storage buffer so I can access their position in the compute shader. Now I want to create a thread for every particle, which computes its new position. So I dispatch an one dimensional work group.
#define WORK_GROUP_SIZE 128
_shaderManager->useProgram("computeProg");
glDispatchCompute((_numParticles/WORK_GROUP_SIZE), 1, 1);
glMemoryBarrier(GL_SHADER_STORAGE_BARRIER_BIT);
Compute shader:
#version 430
struct particle{
vec4 currentPos;
vec4 oldPos;
};
layout(std430, binding=0) buffer particles{
struct particle p[];
};
layout (local_size_x = 128, local_size_y = 1, local_size_z = 1) in;
void main(){
uint gid = gl_GlobalInvocationID.x;
p[gid].currentPos.x += 100;
}
But somehow not all particles are affected. I am doing this the same way it was done in this example but it doesn't work.
http://education.sig...eShader_6pp.pdf
When I want to render 128.000 particles, then the code above would dispatch 128.000/128=1.000 1-dimensional work groups and each of them would have the size of 128. Doesn't it thus create 128*1.000 = 128.000 threads which execute the code in the compute shader above and thus all particles are affected? Each thread would have a differen ID at gl_GlobalInvocationID.x because all work-groups are 1-dimensional Am I missing something?
My other question is relating to glDrawArrays().
The vertex shader receives all the vertices from the shared-storage-buffer and passes them through to the geometry shader, where I emit 4 particles to create a quad on which I map my texture in the fragment shader. The structure which is stored in the shared-storage-buffer for every particle looks like this:
struct Particle{
glm::vec4 _currPosition;
glm::vec4 _prevPosition;
};
When I draw the scene I do the following:
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, BufferID);
glVertexAttribPointer(0, 4, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, sizeof(glm::vec4), 0);
glEnableVertexAttribArray(0);
glEnableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, _numParticles*2);
glDisableClientState(GL_VERTEX_ARRAY);
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, 0);
Somehow when I just call glDrawArrays(GL_POINTS, 0, _numParticles) not all particles are rendered. Why does this happen?
I would suggest the number of the vec4-vectors in the particle-struct is the reason but I am not sure. Could somebody explain it please?
Regards,
StanLee