Book Image

Mastering Graphics Programming with Vulkan

By : Marco Castorina, Gabriel Sassone
5 (1)
Book Image

Mastering Graphics Programming with Vulkan

5 (1)
By: Marco Castorina, Gabriel Sassone

Overview of this book

Vulkan is now an established and flexible multi-platform graphics API. It has been adopted in many industries, including game development, medical imaging, movie productions, and media playback. Learning Vulkan is a foundational step to understanding how a modern graphics API works, both on desktop and mobile. In Mastering Graphics Programming with Vulkan, you’ll begin by developing the foundations of a rendering framework. You’ll learn how to leverage advanced Vulkan features to write a modern rendering engine. The chapters will cover how to automate resource binding and dependencies. You’ll then take advantage of GPU-driven rendering to scale the size of your scenes and finally, you’ll get familiar with ray tracing techniques that will improve the visual quality of your rendered image. By the end of this book, you’ll have a thorough understanding of the inner workings of a modern rendering engine and the graphics techniques employed to achieve state-of-the-art results. The framework developed in this book will be the starting point for all your future experiments.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
1
Part 1: Foundations of a Modern Rendering Engine
7
Part 2: GPU-Driven Rendering
13
Part 3: Advanced Rendering Techniques

Further reading

Global illumination is an incredibly big topic that’s covered extensively in all rendering literature, but we wanted to highlight links that are more connected to the implementation of DDGI.

DDGI itself is an idea that mostly came from a team at Nvidia in 2017, with the central ideas described at https://morgan3d.github.io/articles/2019-04-01-ddgi/index.html.

The original articles on DDGI and its evolution are as follows. They also contain supplemental code that was incredibly helpful in implementing the technique:

The following is a great overview of DDGI with Spherical Harmonics support, and the only diagram to copy the border pixels for bilinear interpolation. It also describes other interesting topics: https://handmade.network/p/75/monter/blog/p/7288-engine_work__global_illumination_with_irradiance_probes...