securityos/node_modules/regl/API.md

112 KiB

REGL API

Table of contents

Initialization

Quick start

As a fullscreen canvas

By default calling module.exports on the regl package creates a full screen canvas element and WebGLRenderingContext.

var regl = require('regl')()

This canvas will dynamically resize whenever the window changes shape. For most quick demos this is an easy way to get started using regl.

From a selector string

If the first argument is a CSS selector string, regl will attempt to find and use the corresponding DOM element. This may be:

  1. an existing HTMLCanvasElement
  2. an element that contains a canvas
  3. an element in which you'd like regl to create a canvas
var regl = require('regl')('#my-canvas');

From a container div

Alternatively passing a container element as the first argument appends the generated canvas to its children.

var regl = require('regl')(element)

// or:

var regl = require('regl')({
  container: element
})

From a canvas

If the first argument is an HTMLCanvasElement, then regl will use this canvas to create a new WebGLRenderingContext that it renders into.

var regl = require('regl')(canvas)

// or:

var regl = require('regl')({
  canvas: canvas
})

From a WebGL context

Finally, if the first argument is a WebGLRenderingContext, then regl will just use this context without touching the DOM at all.

var regl = require('regl')(gl)

// or:

var regl = require('regl')({
  gl: gl
})

From a headless context

The above form can also be used to run regl headlessly by combining it with the headless-gl package. This works in node.js, electron and the browser.

//Creates a headless 256x256 regl instance
var regl = require('regl')(require('gl')(256, 256))

All initialization options

Options Meaning
gl A reference to a WebGL rendering context. (Default created from canvas)
canvas A reference to an HTML canvas element. (Default created and appended to container)
container A container element into which regl inserts a canvas. (Default document.body)
attributes The context creation attributes passed to the WebGL context constructor. See below for defaults.
pixelRatio A multiplier which is used to scale the canvas size relative to the container. (Default window.devicePixelRatio)
extensions A list of extensions that must be supported by WebGL context. Default []
optionalExtensions A list of extensions which are loaded opportunistically. Default []
profile If set, turns on profiling for all commands by default. (Default false)
onDone An optional callback which accepts a pair of arguments, (err, regl) that is called after the application loads. If not specified, context creation errors throw.

Notes

  • canvas or container may be a CSS selector string or a DOM element
  • extensions and optionalExtensions can be either arrays or comma separated strings representing all extensions. For more information see the WebGL extension registry
  • onDone is called

Error messages and debug mode

By default if you compile regl with browserify then all error messages and checks are removed. This is done in order to reduce the size of the final bundle and to improve run time performance.

If you want error messages and are using browserify make sure that you compile using --debug. Not only will this insert debug messages but it will also give you source maps which make finding errors easier.

Alternatively, consider using budo for your live development server. budo automatically compiles your code in debug mode and also provides facilities for live reloading.

Commands

Draw commands are the fundamental abstraction in regl. A draw command wraps up all of the WebGL state associated with a draw call (either drawArrays or drawElements) and packages it into a single reusable function. For example, here is a command that draws a triangle,

const drawTriangle = regl({
  frag: `
  void main() {
    gl_FragColor = vec4(1, 0, 0, 1);
  }`,

  vert: `
  attribute vec2 position;
  void main() {
    gl_Position = vec4(position, 0, 1);
  }`,

  attributes: {
    position: [[0, -1], [-1, 0], [1, 1]]
  },

  count: 3
})

To run a command you call it just like you would any function,

drawTriangle()

Executing commands

There are 3 ways to run a command,

One-shot rendering

In one shot rendering the command runs once immediately,

// Runs command immediately with no arguments
command()

// Runs a command using the specified arguments
command(props)

Batch rendering

A command can also run multiple times by passing a non-negative integer or an array as the first argument. The batchId is initially 0 and incremented for each iteration,

// Runs the command `count`-times
command(count)

// Runs the command once for each props
command([props0, props1, props2, ..., propsn])

In batch mode the command can be a little smarter regarding binding shaders/performing some checks. The command can then figure out which props are constant, which are dynamic, and then only apply the changes on each dynamic prop. This offers a small performance boost.

Scoped commands

Commands can be nested using scoping. If the argument to the command is a function then the command is evaluated and the state variables are saved as the defaults for all commands within its scope,

command(function (context) {
  // ... run sub commands
})

command(props, function (context) {
  // ... run sub commands
})

Inputs

Inputs to regl commands can come from one of three sources,

  • Context: Context variables are not used directly in commands, but can be passed into
  • Props: props are arguments which are passed into commands
  • this: this variables are indexed from the this variable that the command was called with

If you are familiar with Facebook's react, these are roughly analogous to a component's context, props and state variables respectively.

Example

var drawSpinningStretchyTriangle = regl({
  frag: `
  void main() {
    gl_FragColor = vec4(1, 0, 0, 1);
  }`,

  vert: `
  attribute vec2 position;
  uniform float angle, scale, width, height;
  void main() {
    float aspect = width / height;
    gl_Position = vec4(
      scale * (cos(angle) * position.x - sin(angle) * position.y),
      aspect * scale * (sin(angle) * position.x + cos(angle) * position.y),
      0,
      1.0);
  }`,

  attributes: {
    position: [[0, -1], [-1, 0], [1, 1]]
  },

  uniforms: {
    //
    // Dynamic properties can be functions.  Each function gets passed:
    //
    //  * context: which contains data about the current regl environment
    //  * props: which are user specified arguments
    //  * batchId: which is the index of the draw command in the batch
    //
    angle: function (context, props, batchId) {
      return props.speed * context.tick + 0.01 * batchId
    },

    // As a shortcut/optimization we can also just read out a property
    // from the props.  For example, this
    //
    scale: regl.prop('scale'),
    //
    // is semantically equivalent to
    //
    //  scale: function (context, props) {
    //    return props.scale
    //  }
    //

    // Similarly there are shortcuts for accessing context variables
    width: regl.context('viewportWidth'),
    height: regl.context('viewportHeight'),
    //
    // which is the same as writing:
    //
    // width: function (context) {
    //    return context.viewportWidth
    // }
    //
  },

  count: 3
})

To run a draw command with dynamic arguments we pass it a configuration object as the first argument,

// Draws one spinning triangle
drawSpinningStretchyTriangle({
  scale: 0.5,
  speed: 2
})

// Draws multiple spinning triangles
drawSpinningStretchyTriangle([
  { // batchId 0
    scale: 1,
    speed: 1,
  },
  { // batchId 1
    scale: 2,
    speed: 0.1,
  },
  { // batchId 2
    scale: 0.25,
    speed: 3
  }
])

Context

Context variables in regl are computed before any other parameters and can also be passed from a scoped command to any sub-commands. regl defines the following default context variables:

Name Description
tick The number of frames rendered
time Total time elapsed since the regl was initialized in seconds
viewportWidth Width of the current viewport in pixels
viewportHeight Height of the current viewport in pixels
framebufferWidth Width of the current framebuffer in pixels
framebufferHeight Height of the current framebuffer in pixels
drawingBufferWidth Width of the WebGL context drawing buffer
drawingBufferHeight Height of the WebGL context drawing buffer
pixelRatio The pixel ratio of the drawing buffer

You can define context variables in the context block of a command. For example, here is how you can use context variables to set up a camera:

// This scoped command sets up the camera parameters
var setupCamera = regl({
  context: {
    projection: function (context) {
      return mat4.perspective([],
        Math.PI / 4,
        context.viewportWidth / context.viewportHeight,
        0.01,
        1000.0)
    },

    view: function (context, props) {
      return mat4.lookAt([],
        props.eye,
        props.target,
        [0, 1, 0])
    },

    eye: regl.props('eye')
  },

  uniforms: {
    view: regl.context('view'),
    invView: function (context) {
      return mat4.inverse([], context.view)
    },
    projection: regl.context('projection')
  }
})

// ... do stuff

// In the render function:
setupCamera({
  eye: [10, 0, 0],
  target: [0, 0, 0]
}, function () {

  // draw stuff
})

Props

The most common way to pass data into regl is via props. The props for a render command are passed as an argument when the command is called. If the props are an array, then the command is executed in batch mode, once for each prop in order. Otherwise, if the props are an object, then the command is executed once with the props as an input. Any dynamic variable in the command may access the props as the second argument. For example:

const setupUniform = regl({
  // ...

  uniforms: {
    foo: function (context, props) {
      return props.foo
    },

    bar: regl.prop('bar')
    // this is equivalent to:
    //
    //    function (context, props) { return props.bar }
    //
  }
})

this

While regl strives to provide a stateless API, there are a few cases where it can be useful to cache state locally to a specific command. One way to achieve this is to use objects. When a regl command is run as a member function of an object, the this parameter is set to the object on which it was called and is passed to all computed parameters. For example, this shows how to use regl to create a simple reusable mesh object,

// First we create a constructor
function Mesh (center, {positions, cells}) {
  this.center = center
  this.positions = regl.buffer(positions)
  this.cells = regl.buffer(cells)
}

// Then we assign regl commands directly to the prototype of the class
Mesh.prototype.draw = regl({
  vert: `
  uniform mat4 projection, view, model;
  attribute vec3 position;
  void main () {
    gl_Position = projection * view * model * vec4(position, 1);
  }`,

  frag: `
  void main () {
    gl_FragColor = vec4(1, 0, 0, 1);
  }`,

  uniforms: {
    // dynamic properties are invoked with the same `this` as the command
    model: function () {
      var c = this.center
      return [
        1, 0, 0, 0,
        0, 1, 0, 0,
        0, 0, 1, 0,
        -c[0], -c[1], -c[2], 1
      ]
    },

    view: regl.prop('view'),
    projection: regl.prop('projection')
  },

  attributes: {
    // here we are using 'positions' property of the mesh
    position: regl.this('positions')
  },

  // and same for the cells
  elements: regl.this('cells')
})

Once defined, we could then use these mesh objects as follows:

// Initialize meshes
var bunnyMesh = new Mesh([5, 2, 1], require('bunny'))
var teapotMesh = new Mesh([0, -3, 0], require('teapot'))

// ... set up rest of scene, compute matrices etc.
var view, projection

// Now draw meshes:
bunnyMesh.draw({
  view: view,
  projection: projection
})

teapotMesh.draw({
  view: view,
  projection: projection
})

Parameters

The input to a command declaration is a complete description of the WebGL state machine in the form of an object. The properties of this object are parameters which specify how values in the WebGL state machine are to be computed.


Shaders

Each draw command can specify the source code for a vertex and/or fragment shader,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  vert: `
  void main() {
    gl_Position = vec4(0, 0, 0, 1);
  }`,

  frag: `
  void main() {
    gl_FragColor = vec4(1, 0, 1, 1);
  }`,

  // ...
})
Property Description
vert Source code of vertex shader
frag Source code of fragment shader

Related WebGL APIs


Uniforms

Uniform variables are specified in the uniforms block of the command. For example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  vert: `
  struct SomeStruct {
    float value;
  };

  uniform vec4 someUniform;
  uniform int anotherUniform;
  uniform SomeStruct nested;
  uniform vec4 colors[2];

  void main() {
    gl_Position = vec4(1, 0, 0, 1);
  }`,

  uniforms: {
    someUniform: [1, 0, 0, 1],
    anotherUniform: regl.prop('myProp'),
    'nested.value': 5.3,
    'colors[0]': [0, 1, 0, 1],
    'colors[1]': [0, 0, 1, 1]
  },

  // ...
})

Notes

  • To specify uniforms in GLSL structs use the fully qualified path with dot notation.
  • To specify uniforms in GLSL arrays use the fully qualified path with bracket notation.
  • Matrix uniforms are specified as flat length n^2 arrays without transposing

Related WebGL APIs


Attributes

var command = regl({
  // ...

  attributes: {
    // Attributes can be declared explicitly
    normal: {
      buffer: regl.buffer([
        // ...
      ]),
      offset: 0,
      stride: 12,
      normalized: false,

      // divisor is only used if instancing is enabled
      divisor: 0
    },

    // A regl.buffer or the arguments to regl.buffer may also be specified
    position: [
      0, 1, 2,
      2, 3, 4,
      ...
    ],

    // Finally, attributes may be initialized with a constant value
    color: {
      constant: [1, 0, 1, 1]
    }
  },

  // ...
})

Each attribute can have any of the following optional properties,

Property Description Default
buffer A REGLBuffer wrapping the buffer object null
offset The offset of the vertexAttribPointer in bytes 0
stride The stride of the vertexAttribPointer in bytes 0
normalized Whether the pointer is normalized false
size The size of the vertex attribute Inferred from shader
divisor Sets gl.vertexAttribDivisorANGLE 0 *

Notes

  • Attribute size is inferred from the shader vertex attribute if not specified
  • If a buffer is passed for an attribute then all pointer info is inferred
  • If the arguments to regl.buffer are passed, then a buffer is constructed
  • If an array is passed to an attribute, then the vertex attribute is set to a constant
  • divisor is only supported if the ANGLE_instanced_arrays extension is available

Related WebGL APIs


Drawing

var command = regl({
  // ...

  primitive: 'triangles',
  offset: 0,
  count: 6
})
Property Description Default
primitive Sets the primitive type 'triangles' *
count Number of vertices to draw 0 *
offset Offset of primitives to draw 0
instances Number of instances to render 0 **
elements Element array buffer null

Notes

  • If elements is specified while primitive, count and offset are not, then these values may be inferred from the state of the element array buffer.
  • elements must be either an instance of regl.elements or else the arguments to regl.elements
  • instances is only applicable if the ANGLE_instanced_arrays extension is present.
  • primitive can take on the following values
Primitive type Description
'points' gl.POINTS
'lines' gl.LINES
'line strip' gl.LINE_STRIP
'line loop gl.LINE_LOOP
'triangles gl.TRIANGLES
'triangle strip' gl.TRIANGLE_STRIP
'triangle fan' gl.TRIANGLE_FAN

Related WebGL APIs


Render target

A regl.framebuffer object may also be specified to allow for rendering to offscreen locations.

var command = regl({
  framebuffer: fbo
})

Notes

  • framebuffer must be a regl.framebuffer object
  • Passing null sets the framebuffer to the drawing buffer
  • Updating the render target will modify the viewport

Related WebGL APIs


Profiling

regl can optionally instrument commands to track profiling data. This is toggled by setting the profile flag on each command.

var myScope = regl({
  profile: true
})

var drawA = regl({ ... })
var drawB = regl({ ... })

regl.frame(function () {
  myScope(function () {
    drawA()
    drawB()
  })

  console.log(drawA.stats.count)
  console.log(drawB.stats.count)
})

The following stats are tracked for each command in the .stats property:

Statistic Meaning
count The number of times the command has been called
cpuTime The cumulative CPU time spent executing the command in milliseconds
gpuTime The cumulative GPU time spent executing the command in milliseconds (requires the EXT_disjoint_timer_query extension)

Notes

  • GPU timer queries update asynchronously. If you are not using regl.frame() to tick your application, then you should periodically call regl.poll() each frame to update the timer statistics.
  • CPU time uses performance.now if available, otherwise it falls back to Date.now

Related WebGL APIs


Depth buffer

All state relating to the depth buffer is stored in the depth field of the command. For example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  depth: {
    enable: true,
    mask: true,
    func: 'less',
    range: [0, 1]
  },

  // ..
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.DEPTH_TEST) true
mask Sets gl.depthMask true
range Sets gl.depthRange [0, 1]
func Sets gl.depthFunc. See table below for possible values 'less'

Notes

  • depth.func can take on the possible values
Value Description
'never' gl.NEVER
'always' gl.ALWAYS
'<', 'less' gl.LESS
'<=', 'lequal' gl.LEQUAL
'>', 'greater' gl.GREATER
'>=', 'gequal' gl.GEQUAL
'=', 'equal' gl.EQUAL
'!=', 'notequal' gl.NOTEQUAL

Related WebGL APIs


Blending

Blending information is stored in the blend field,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  blend: {
    enable: true,
    func: {
      srcRGB: 'src alpha',
      srcAlpha: 1,
      dstRGB: 'one minus src alpha',
      dstAlpha: 1
    },
    equation: {
      rgb: 'add',
      alpha: 'add'
    },
    color: [0, 0, 0, 0]
  },

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.BLEND) false
equation Sets gl.blendEquation (see table) 'add'
func Sets gl.blendFunc (see table) {src:'one',dst:'one'}
color Sets gl.blendColor [0, 0, 0, 0]

Notes

  • equation can be either a string or an object with the fields {rgb, alpha}. The former corresponds to gl.blendEquation and the latter to gl.blendEquationSeparate
  • The fields of equation can take on the following values
Equation Description
'add' gl.FUNC_ADD
'subtract' gl.FUNC_SUBTRACT
'reverse subtract' gl.FUNC_REVERSE_SUBTRACT
'min' gl.MIN_EXT
'max' gl.MAX_EXT
  • 'min' and 'max' are only available if the EXT_blend_minmax extension is supported
  • func can be an object with the fields {src, dst} or {srcRGB, srcAlpha, dstRGB, dstAlpha}, with the former corresponding to gl.blendFunc and the latter to gl.blendFuncSeparate
  • The fields of func can take on the following values
Func Description
0, 'zero' gl.ZERO
1, 'one' gl.ONE
'src color' gl.SRC_COLOR
'one minus src color' gl.ONE_MINUS_SRC_COLOR
'src alpha' gl.SRC_ALPHA
'one minus src alpha' gl.ONE_MINUS_SRC_ALPHA
'dst color' gl.DST_COLOR
'one minus dst color' gl.ONE_MINUS_DST_COLOR
'dst alpha' gl.DST_ALPHA
'one minus dst alpha' gl.ONE_MINUS_DST_ALPHA
'constant color' gl.CONSTANT_COLOR
'one minus constant color' gl.ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_COLOR
'constant alpha' gl.CONSTANT_ALPHA
'one minus constant alpha' gl.ONE_MINUS_CONSTANT_ALPHA
'src alpha saturate' gl.SRC_ALPHA_SATURATE

Related WebGL APIs


Stencil

Example:

var command = regl({
  // ...

  stencil: {
    enable: true,
    mask: 0xff,
    func: {
      cmp: '<',
      ref: 0,
      mask: 0xff
    },
    opFront: {
      fail: 'keep',
      zfail: 'keep',
      zpass: 'keep'
    },
    opBack: {
      fail: 'keep',
      zfail: 'keep',
      zpass: 'keep'
    }
  },

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.STENCIL_TEST) false
mask Sets gl.stencilMask -1
func Sets gl.stencilFunc {cmp:'always',ref:0,mask:-1}
opFront Sets gl.stencilOpSeparate for front face {fail:'keep',zfail:'keep',zpass:'keep'}
opBack Sets gl.stencilOpSeparate for back face {fail:'keep',zfail:'keep',zpass:'keep'}
op Sets opFront and opBack simultaneously

Notes

  • func is an object which configures the stencil test function. It has 3 properties,

    • cmp which is the comparison function
    • ref which is the reference value
    • mask which is the comparison mask
  • func.cmp is a comparison operator which takes one of the following values,

Value Description
'never' gl.NEVER
'always' gl.ALWAYS
'<', 'less' gl.LESS
'<=', 'lequal' gl.LEQUAL
'>', 'greater' gl.GREATER
'>=', 'gequal' gl.GEQUAL
'=', 'equal' gl.EQUAL
'!=', 'notequal' gl.NOTEQUAL
  • opFront and opBack specify the stencil op. Each is an object which takes the following parameters:

    • fail, the stencil op which is applied when the stencil test fails
    • zfail, the stencil op which is applied when the stencil test passes and the depth test fails
    • zpass, the stencil op which is applied when both stencil and depth tests pass
  • Values for op.fail, op.zfail, op.zpass can come from the following table

Stencil Op Description
'zero' gl.ZERO
'keep' gl.KEEP
'replace' gl.REPLACE
'invert' gl.INVERT
'increment' gl.INCR
'decrement' gl.DECR
'increment wrap' gl.INCR_WRAP
'decrement wrap' gl.DECR_WRAP

Related WebGL APIs


Polygon offset

Polygon offsetting behavior can be controlled using the polygonOffset field,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  polygonOffset: {
    enable: true,
    offset: {
      factor: 1,
      units: 0
    }
  }

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.POLYGON_OFFSET_FILL) false
offset Sets gl.polygonOffset {factor:0, units:0}

Related WebGL APIs


Culling

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  cull: {
    enable: true,
    face: 'back'
  },

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.CULL_FACE) false
face Sets gl.cullFace 'back'

Notes

  • face must be one of the following values,
Face Description
'front' gl.FRONT
'back' gl.BACK

Relevant WebGL APIs


Front face

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  frontFace: 'cw',

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
frontFace Sets gl.frontFace 'ccw'

Notes

  • The value for front face must be one of the following,
Orientation Description
'cw' gl.CW
'ccw' gl.CCW

Relevant WebGL APIs


Dithering

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  dither: true,

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
dither Toggles gl.DITHER false

Line width

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  lineWidth: 4,

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
lineWidth Sets gl.lineWidth 1

Relevant WebGL APIs


Color mask

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  colorMask: [true, false, true, false],

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
colorMask Sets gl.colorMask [true, true, true, true]

Relevant WebGL APIs


Sample coverage

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  sample: {
    enable: true,
    alpha: false,
    coverage: {
      value: 1,
      invert: false
    }
  },

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.SAMPLE_COVERAGE) false
alpha Toggles gl.enable(gl.SAMPLE_ALPHA_TO_COVERAGE) false
coverage Sets gl.sampleCoverage {value:1,invert:false}

Relevant WebGL APIs


Scissor

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  scissor: {
    enable: true,
    box: {
      x: 10,
      y: 20,
      width: 100,
      height: 100
    }
  }

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
enable Toggles gl.enable(gl.SCISSOR) false
box Sets gl.scissor {}

Notes

  • box is the shape of the scissor region, it takes the following parameters

    • x is the left coordinate of the box, default 0
    • y is the top coordiante of the box, default 0
    • width is the width of the box, default fbo width - x
    • height is the height of the box, default fbo height - y

Relevant WebGL APIs


Viewport

Example,

var command = regl({
  // ...

  viewport: {
    x: 5,
    y: 10,
    width: 100,
    height: 50
  }

  // ...
})
Property Description Default
viewport The shape of viewport {}

Notes

  • Like scissor.box, viewport is a bounding box with properties x,y,w,h
  • Updating viewport will modify the context variables viewportWidth and viewportHeight

Relevant WebGL APIs


Resources

Besides commands, the other major component of regl are resources. Resources are GPU resident objects which are managed explicitly by the programmer. Each resource follows a the same life cycle of create/read/update/delete.


Buffers

regl.buffer wraps WebGL array buffer objects.

Buffer constructor

// Creates an empty length 100 buffer
var zeroBuffer = regl.buffer(100)

// A buffer with float data
var floatBuffer = regl.buffer(new Float32Array([1, 2, 3, 4]))

// A streaming buffer of bytes
var streamBuffer = regl.buffer({
  usage: 'stream',
  data: new Uint8Array([2, 4, 6, 8, 10])
})

// An unpacked buffer of position data
var positionBuffer = regl.buffer([
  [1, 2, 3],
  [4, 5, 6],
  [2, 1, -2]
])
Property Description Default
data The data for the vertex buffer (see below) null
length If data is null or not present reserves space for the buffer 0
usage Sets array buffer usage hint 'static'
type Data type for vertex buffer 'uint8'
  • usage can be one of the following values
Usage Hint Description
'static' gl.DRAW_STATIC
'dynamic' gl.DYNAMIC_DRAW
'stream' gl.STREAM_DRAW
  • type can be one of the following data types
Data type Description
'uint8' gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE
'int8' gl.BYTE
'uint16' gl.UNSIGNED_SHORT
'int16' gl.SHORT
'uint32' gl.UNSIGNED_INT
'int32' gl.INT
'float32', 'float' gl.FLOAT

Relevant WebGL APIs

Buffer update

To reinitialize a buffer in place, we can call the buffer as a function:

// First we create a buffer
var myBuffer = regl.buffer(5)

// ... do stuff ...

// Now reinitialize myBuffer
myBuffer({
  data: [
    1, 2, 3, 4, 5
  ]
})

The arguments to the update pathway are the same as the constructor and the returned value will be a reference to the buffer.

Relevant WebGL APIs

Buffer subdata

For performance reasons we may sometimes want to update just a portion of the buffer. You can update a portion of the buffer using the subdata method. This can be useful if you are dealing with frequently changing or streaming vertex data. Here is an example:

// First we preallocate a buffer with 100 bytes of data
var myBuffer = regl.buffer({
  usage: 'dynamic',  // give the WebGL driver a hint that this buffer may change
  type: 'float',
  length: 100
})

// Now we initialize the head of the buffer with the following data
myBuffer.subdata([ 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 ])
//
// untyped arrays and arrays-of-arrays are converted to the same data type as
// the buffer.  typedarrays are copied bit-for-bit into the buffer
// with no type conversion.
//

// We can also update the buffer at some byte offset by passing this as
// the second argument to subdata
myBuffer.subdata([[7, 8], [9, 10]], 8)
//
// now the contents of myBuffer are:
//
//  new Float32Array([0, 1, 7, 8, 9, 10, 0, 0, 0, .... ])
//

Relevant WebGL APIs

Buffer destructor

Calling .destroy() on a buffer releases all resources associated to the buffer:

// Create a buffer
var myBuffer = regl.buffer(10)

// destroys the buffer
myBuffer.destroy()

Profiling info

The following stats are tracked for each buffer in the .stats property:

Statistic Meaning
size The size of the buffer in bytes

Vertex array objects

regl.vao wraps WebGL vertex array objects. A vertex array object is a complete binding state for the set of all attributes for a given shader. This feature requires some caution when it is used since it depends on the specific ordering of vertex attributes which is determined at program link time. This will only have a performance benefit when the OES_vertex_array_object extension is enabled. If OES_vertex_array_object is not enabled, then vertex array objects are emulated.

If OES_vertex_array_object is enabled then regl will try to optimize static draw commands when possible to user vertex array objects.

Vertex array object constructor

A vertex array object constructor takes as input an array of vertex bindings:

// First we create the VAO object
var vao = regl.vao([
  // first attribute is a triangle
  [ [0, 1], [1, 0], [1, 1] ],

  // second attribute is a color
  { x: 1, y: 0, z: 1 }
])

// then we create the command
var command = regl({
  frag: `
  precision highp float;
  varying vec3 fragColor;
  void main () {
    gl_FragColor = vec4(fragColor, 1.);
  }`
  
  vert: `
  precision highp float;
  attribute vec2 position;
  attribute vec3 color;
  varying vec3 fragColor;
  void main () {
    fragColor = color;
    gl_Position = vec4(position, 0, 1);
  }`,

  // specify the vertex array object for this command
  vao: vao,

  // when using a VAO object we give numerical ids for each attribute binding location
  attributes: {
    position: 0,
    color: 1
  },

  count: 3
})

You can also bake the element state into a vao:

// First we create the VAO object
var vao = regl.vao({
  attributes: [
    [ [0, 1], [1, 0], [1, 1] ],
  },

  // if not specified, then default is no elements
  elements: [[ 0, 1, 2 ]],
])

Relevant WebGL APIs

Vertex array object update

You can update a vertex array object just like a buffer,

vao([
  [ [0, 1], [1, 0], [0.5, 1] ],
  { x: 1, y: 1, z: 0 }
])

Vertex array object destructor

vao.destroy()

Elements

regl.elements wraps WebGL element array buffer objects. Each regl.elements object stores a buffer object as well as the primitive type and vertex count.

Element constructor

var triElements = regl.elements([
  [1, 2, 3],
  [0, 2, 5]
])

var starElements = regl.elements({
  primitive: 'line loop',
  count: 5,
  data: new Uint8Array([0, 2, 4, 1, 3])
})
Property Description Default
data The data of the element buffer null
usage Usage hint (see gl.bufferData) 'static'
length Length of the element buffer in bytes 0 *
primitive Default primitive type for element buffer 'triangles' *
type Data type for element buffer 'uint8'
count Vertex count for element buffer 0 *
  • usage must take on one of the following values
Usage Hint Description
'static' gl.DRAW_STATIC
'dynamic' gl.DYNAMIC_DRAW
'stream' gl.STREAM_DRAW
  • primitive can be one of the following primitive types
Primitive type Description
'points' gl.POINTS
'lines' gl.LINES
'line strip' gl.LINE_STRIP
'line loop' gl.LINE_LOOP
'triangles' gl.TRIANGLES
'triangle strip' gl.TRIANGLE_STRIP
'triangle fan' gl.TRIANGLE_FAN
  • type can be one of the following data types
Data type Description Extension?
'uint8' gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE
'uint16' gl.UNSIGNED_SHORT
'uint32' gl.UNSIGNED_INT OES_element_index_uint

Notes

  • primitive, count and length are inferred from from the vertex data

Relevant WebGL APIs

Element update

As in the case of buffers, calling an element buffer as a function reinitializes an element buffer in place. The arguments are the same as for the constructor. For example:

// First we create an element buffer
var myElements = regl.elements()

// Then we update it by calling it directly
myElements({
  data: [
    [1, 2, 3],
    [0, 2, 1]
  ]
})

Relevant WebGL APIs

Element subdata

Again like buffers it is possible to preallocate an element buffer and update regions of the elements using the subdata command.

// First we preallocate the element buffer
var myElements = regl.elements({
  primitive: 'triangles',
  usage: 'dynamic',
  type: 'uint16',
  length: 4096,
  count: 0
})

// Then we can update into ranges of the element buffer using subdata
myElements.subdata(
  [ [0, 1, 2],
    [2, 1, 3] ])

Relevant WebGL APIs

Element destructor

// First we create an element buffer
var myElements = regl.elements({ ... })

// Calling .destroy() on an element buffer releases all resources associated to
// it
myElements.destroy()

Relevant WebGL APIs


Textures

Texture constructor

There are many ways to upload data to a texture in WebGL. As with drawing commands, regl consolidates all of these configuration parameters into one function. Here are some examples of how to create a texture,

// From size parameters
var emptyTexture = regl.texture({
  shape: [16, 16]
})

// From a flat array
var typedArrayTexture = regl.texture({
  width: 2,
  height: 2,
  data: [
    255, 255, 255, 255, 0, 0, 0, 0,
    255, 0, 255, 255, 0, 0, 255, 255
  ]
})

// From a square array
var nestedArrayTexture = regl.texture([
  [ [0, 255, 0],  [255, 0, 0] ],
  [ [0, 0, 255], [255, 255, 255] ]
])

// From an ndarray-like object
var ndarrayTexture = regl.texture(require('baboon-image'))

// Manual mipmap specification
var mipmapTexture = regl.texture({
  min: 'mipmap'
})

// From an image element
var image = new Image()
image.src = 'http://mydomain.com/myimage.png'
image.onload = function () {
  var imageTexture = regl.texture(image)
}

/* From an ImageBitmap
 * This is only useful when loading many images, as bitmaps can be created asynchronously
 * and will transfer faster than an image element.
 */
var image = new Image()
image.src = 'http://mydomain.com/myimage.png'
image.onload = function () {
  createImageBitmap(image).then(function (bitmap) {
    var imageTexture = regl.texture(bitmap)
  }
}

// From a canvas
var canvas = document.createElement(canvas)
var context2D = canvas.getContext('2d')
var canvasTexture = regl.texture(canvas)
var otherCanvasTexture = regl.texture(context2D)

// From a video element
var video = document.querySelector('video')
var videoTexture = regl.texture(video)

// From the pixels in the current frame buffer
var copyPixels = regl.texture({
  x: 5,
  y: 1,
  width: 10,
  height: 10,
  copy: true
})

A data source from an image can be one of the following types:

Data type Description
Rectangular array of arrays Interpreted as 2D array of arrays
Typed array A binary array of pixel values
Array Interpreted as array of pixel values with type based on the input type
ndarray Any object with a shape, stride, offset, data (see SciJS ndarray)
Image An HTML image element
ImageBitmap An ImageBitmap object
Video An HTML video element
Canvas A canvas element
Context 2D A canvas 2D context
Property Description Default
width Width of texture 0
height Height of texture 0
mag Sets magnification filter (see table) 'nearest'
min Sets minification filter (see table) 'nearest'
wrapS Sets wrap mode on S axis (see table) 'clamp'
wrapT Sets wrap mode on T axis (see table) 'clamp'
aniso Sets number of anisotropic samples, requires EXT_texture_filter_anisotropic 0
format Texture format (see table) 'rgba'
type Texture type (see table) 'uint8'
data Input data (see below)
mipmap See below for a description false
flipY Flips textures vertically when uploading false
alignment Sets unpack alignment per row 1
premultiplyAlpha Premultiply alpha when unpacking false
colorSpace Sets colorspace conversion 'none'
data Image data for the texture null
copy Copy the pixels in the current frame buffer. Cannot be used with data prop. false
channels Number of channels for the texture format null
  • mipmap. If boolean, then it sets whether or not we should regenerate the mipmaps. If a string, it allows you to specify a hint to the mipmap generator. It can be one of the hints below
Mipmap Hint Description
'don't care', 'dont care' gl.DONT_CARE
'nice' gl.NICEST
'fast' gl.FASTEST

and if a hint is specified, then also the mipmaps will be regenerated. Finally, mipmap can also be an array of arrays. In this case, every subarray will be one of the mipmaps, and you can thus use this option to manually specify the mipmaps of the image. Like this:

regl.texture({
  shape: [4, 4],
  mipmap: [
    [ 0, 1, 2, 3,
      4, 5, 6, 7,
      8, 9, 10, 11,
      12, 13, 14, 15 ],
    [ 0, 1,
      2, 3 ],
    [ 0 ]
  ]
})
  • shape can be used as an array shortcut for [width, height, channels] of image

  • channels can be used to set the number of color channels of the texture. Examples:

    var t1 = regl.texture({width: 1, height: 1, channels: 3}) // 'format' will be 'rgb' var t2 = regl.texture({shape: [2, 2, 2]}) // 'format' will be 'luminance alpha' var t3 = regl.texture({shape: [2, 2, 4]}) // 'format' will be 'rgba'

So it can be used as an alternative to format.

  • radius can be specified for square images and sets both width and height
  • data can take one of the following values,
  • If an image element is specified and not yet loaded, then regl will upload a temporary image and hook a callback on the image
  • mag sets gl.MAG_FILTER for the texture and can have one of the following values
Mag filter Description
'nearest' gl.NEAREST
'linear' gl.LINEAR
  • min sets gl.MIN_FILTER for the texture, and can take on one of the following values,
Min filter Description
'nearest' gl.NEAREST
'linear' gl.LINEAR
'mipmap', 'linear mipmap linear' gl.LINEAR_MIPMAP_LINEAR
'nearest mipmap linear' gl.NEAREST_MIPMAP_LINEAR
'linear mipmap nearest' gl.LINEAR_MIPMAP_NEAREST
'nearest mipmap nearest' gl.NEAREST_MIPMAP_NEAREST
  • wrap can be used as an array shortcut for [wrapS, wrapT]
  • wrapS and wrapT can have any of the following values,
Wrap mode Description
'repeat' gl.REPEAT
'clamp' gl.CLAMP_TO_EDGE
'mirror' gl.MIRRORED_REPEAT
  • format determines the format of the texture and possibly the type. Possible values for format include,
Format Description Channels Types Compressed? Extension?
'alpha' gl.ALPHA 1 'uint8','half float','float'
'luminance' gl.LUMINANCE 1 'uint8','half float','float'
'luminance alpha' gl.LUMINANCE_ALPHA 2 'uint8','half float','float'
'rgb' gl.RGB 3 'uint8','half float','float'
'rgba' gl.RGBA 4 'uint8','half float','float'
'rgba4' gl.RGBA4 4 'rgba4'
'rgb5 a1' gl.RGB5_A1 4 'rgb5 a1'
'rgb565' gl.RGB565 3 'rgb565'
'srgb' ext.SRGB 3 'uint8','half float','float' EXT_sRGB
'srgba' ext.RGBA 4 'uint8','half float','float' EXT_sRGB
'depth' gl.DEPTH_COMPONENT 1 'uint16','uint32' WEBGL_depth_texture
'depth stencil' gl.DEPTH_STENCIL 2 'depth stencil' WEBGL_depth_texture
'rgb s3tc dxt1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGB_S3TC_DXT1_EXT 3 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_s3tc
'rgba s3tc dxt1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT1_EXT 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_s3tc
'rgba s3tc dxt3' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT3_EXT 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_s3tc
'rgba s3tc dxt5' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_S3TC_DXT5_EXT 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_s3tc
'rgb atc' ext.COMPRESSED_RGB_ATC_WEBGL 3 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_atc
'rgba atc explicit alpha' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_ATC_EXPLICIT_ALPHA_WEBGL 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_atc
'rgba atc interpolated alpha' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_ATC_INTERPOLATED_ALPHA_WEBGL 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_atc
'rgb pvrtc 4bppv1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGB_PVRTC_4BPPV1_IMG 3 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_pvrtc
'rgb pvrtc 2bppv1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGB_PVRTC_2BPPV1_IMG 3 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_pvrtc
'rgba pvrtc 4bppv1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_PVRTC_4BPPV1_IMG 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_pvrtc
'rgba pvrtc 2bppv1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGBA_PVRTC_2BPPV1_IMG 4 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_pvrtc
'rgb etc1' ext.COMPRESSED_RGB_ETC1_WEBGL 3 'uint8' WEBGL_compressed_texture_etc1
  • In many cases type can be inferred from the format and other information in the texture. However, in some situations it may still be necessary to set it manually. In such an event, the following values are possible,
Type Description
'uint8' gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE
'uint16' gl.UNSIGNED_SHORT
'uint32' gl.UNSIGNED_INT
'float', 'float32' gl.FLOAT
'half float', 'float16' ext.HALF_FLOAT_OES
  • colorSpace sets the WebGL color space flag for pixel unpacking
Color space Description
'none' gl.NONE
'browser' gl.BROWSER_DEFAULT_WEBGL
  • alignment sets the pixel unpack alignment and must be one of [1, 2, 4, 8]

Relevant WebGL APIs

Texture update

Like buffers, textures can be reinitialized in place. Calling the texture as a function re-evaluates the constructor and initializes the texture to a new value:

// First we create a texture
const myTexture = regl.texture()

// Then we can reinitialize it
myTexture({
  width: 10,
  height: 10
})

Doing this lets you defer texture construction or reuse texture objects.

Relevant WebGL APIs

Texture subimage

It is also possible to update a subset of a texture contained in a rectangle. This can be done using the subimage() method of the texture:

const myTexture = regl.texture(4, 4)

myTexture.subimage({
  width: 1,
  height: 1,
  data: [255, 0, 0, 255]
}, 1, 1)

For textures, subimage takes 4 arguments:

texture.subimage(data[, x, y, level])

Where,

  • data is an image data object, similar to the arguments for the texture constructor
  • x, y is the offset of the subimage within the texture (default 0,0)
  • level is the miplevel to run the subimage within (default 0)

Relevant WebGL APIs

Texture resize

Finally, textures can be resized with the .resize() method. Note that this clears the contents of the texture and is not supported by compressed textures.

var texture = regl.texture(5)

texture.resize(3, 7)
Texture properties

The following properties contains information about the texture.

Property Description
width Width of texture
height Height of texture
format Texture Format
type Texture Type
mag Texture magnification filter
min Texture minification filter
wrapS Texture wrap mode on S axis
wrapT Texture wrap mode on T axis

They can be accessed after texture creation like this:

var t = regl.texture({
  shape: [16, 16],
  min: 'nearest mipmap linear',
  mag: 'linear',
  wrapS: 'mirror',
  wrapT: 'repeat',
  format: 'rgb',
  type: 'uint8'
})

console.log('tex info: ', t.width, t.height, t.min, t.mag, t.wrapS, t.wrapT, t.format, t.type)

Texture destructor

Finally, when a texture is no longer needed it can be released by calling the destroy() method:

var myTexture = regl.texture({ ... })

myTexture.destroy()

Relevant WebGL APIs

Texture profiling

The following stats are tracked for each texture in the .stats property:

Statistic Meaning
size The size of the texture in bytes

Cube maps

Cube map constructor

Cube maps follow similar syntax to textures. They are created using regl.cube()

// We can allocate a cubemap by giving just the size of the an edge:
const emptyCube = regl.cube(16)

// We can also specify each face individually
const posX = new Image()
const negX = new Image()
// ... etc
const cubeMap = regl.cube(
  posX,
  negX,
  posY,
  negY,
  posZ,
  negZ)

// Or we can initialize each face using an array
const anotherCubeMap = regl.cube({
  radius: 4,
  faces: [
    [
      0, 0, 0, 255, 255, 0, 0, 255,
      0, 255, 0, 255, 0, 0, 255, 255
    ],
    // ...
  ]
})

Cube map update

Cube maps can be reinitialized like textures or buffers:

const cube = regl.cube(8)

// Reset cube map
cube(4)

// Resize cube map
cube.resize(16)
Cube map subimage

Sub-rectangles of faces of cube maps can be updated again using .subimage.

const cube = regl.cube(4)

cube.subimage(0, [
  0, 0, 0, 255, 0, 255, 0, 255,
  255, 0, 0, 255, 0, 0, 255, 255
])

cube.subimage takes the following arguments:

cube.subimage(face, data[, x, y, miplevel])

Relevant WebGL APIs

Cube map resize

Cube maps can be resized in place using the .resize() method. This takes one argument which is the size of the cube map.

var cubemap = regl.cube({ ... })

cubemap.resize(16)

Cube map properties

The following properties contains information about the cube map.

Property Description
width Width of a single cube map face
height Height of a single cube map face
format Texture Format
type Texture Type
mag Texture magnification filter
min Texture minification filter
wrapS Texture wrap mode on S axis
wrapT Texture wrap mode on T axis

They can be accessed after cube map creation like this:

var c = regl.cube({
  width: 2,
  height: 2
})

console.log('cube: ', c.width, c.height, c.format, c.type, c.mag, c.min, c.wrapS, c.wrapT)

Cube map profiling

The following stats are tracked for each cube map in the .stats property:

Statistic Meaning
size The size of the cube map in bytes

Cube map destructor

cubeMap.destroy()

Relevant WebGL APIs


Renderbuffers

Renderbuffer constructor

// Allocate a new renderbuffer with the prescribed format
var rb = regl.renderbuffer({
  width: 16,
  height: 16,
  format: 'rgba4'
})

// Allocate an 'rgba4' renderbuffer with a fixed size
var rgba_16x24 = regl.renderbuffer(16, 24)
Property Interpretation Default
'format' Sets the internal format of the render buffer (see below) 'rgba4'
'width' Sets the width of the render buffer in pixels 1
'height' Sets the height of the render buffer in pixels 1
'shape' Alias for width and height [1,1]
'radius' Simultaneously sets width and height 1
Format Description
'rgba4' gl.RGBA4
'rgb565' gl.RGB565
'rgb5 a1' gl.RGB5_A1
'depth' gl.DEPTH_COMPONENT16
'stencil' gl.STENCIL_INDEX8
'depth stencil' gl.DEPTH_STENCIL
'srgba' ext.SRGB8_ALPHA8_EXT, only if EXT_sRGB supported
'rgba16f' 16 bit floating point RGBA buffer, only if EXT_color_buffer_half_float
'rgb16f' 16 bit floating point RGB buffer, only if EXT_color_buffer_half_float
'rgba32f' 32 bit floating point RGBA buffer, only if WEBGL_color_buffer_float supported

Relevant WebGL APIs

Renderbuffer update

Like all other resources, renderbuffers can be updated in place:

var renderbuffer = regl.renderbuffer()

renderbuffer({
  radius: 3,
  format: 'depth'
})
Renderbuffer resize

A renderbuffer can also be resized in place by calling .resize():

var renderbuffer = regl.renderbuffer({
  shape: [10, 10],
  format: 'depth stencil'
})

renderbuffer.resize(32, 32)

Renderbuffer properties

The following properties contains information about the renderbuffer.

Property Description
width Width of the renderbuffer
height Height of the renderbuffer
format Format of the renderbuffer

They can be accessed after renderbuffer creation like this:

var r = regl.renderbuffer({shape: [1, 1],
  format: 'rgb5 a1'
})

console.log('renderbuffer: ', r.width, r.height, r.format)

Renderbuffers destructor

rb.destroy()

Relevant WebGL APIs

Renderbuffer profiling

The following stats are tracked for each renderbuffer in the .stats property:

Statistic Meaning
size The size of the renderbuffer in bytes

Framebuffers

Framebuffer constructor

// Creating a simple 2x2 framebuffer:
var fbo2x2 = regl.framebuffer(2)

// A 256x256 framebuffer without a stencil attachment
var fbo = regl.framebuffer({
  width: 256,
  height: 256,
  stencil: false
})

// A framebuffer with a color buffer
var texture = regl.texture(16)
var texFBO = regl.framebuffer({
  color: texture
})
Property Description Default
shape Sets the dimensions [width, height] for the framebuffer.
radius Sets the dimensions radius x radius for the framebuffer.
width Sets the width of the framebuffer gl.drawingBufferWidth
height Sets the height of the framebuffer gl.drawingBufferHeight
color/colors A texture or renderbuffer (or an array of these) for the color attachment.
depth If boolean, toggles the depth attachment. If a renderbuffer or texture, sets the depth attachment. true
stencil If boolean, toggles the stencil attachment. If a renderbuffer or texture, sets the stencil attachment. true
depthStencil If boolean, toggles both the depth and stencil attachments. If a renderbuffer or texture, sets the combined depth/stencil attachment. true
colorFormat Sets the format of the color buffer. Ignored if color is specified. 'rgba'
colorType Sets the type of the color buffer if it is a texture. 'uint8'
colorCount Sets the number of color buffers. Values > 1 require WEBGL_draw_buffers 1
depthTexture Toggles whether depth/stencil attachments should be in texture. Requires WEBGL_depth_texture false
Color format Description Attachment Notes
'rgba' gl.RGBA Texture
'rgba4' gl.RGBA4 Renderbuffer
'rgb565' gl.RGB565 Renderbuffer
'rgb5 a1' gl.RGB5_A1 Renderbuffer
'rgb16f' gl.RGB16F Renderbuffer only if EXT_color_buffer_half_float
'rgba16f' gl.RGBA16F Renderbuffer only if EXT_color_buffer_half_float
'rgba32f' gl.RGBA32F Renderbuffer only if WEBGL_color_buffer_float supported
'srgba' gl.SRGB8_ALPHA8 Renderbuffer only if EXT_sRGB supported
Color type Description
'uint8' gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE
'half float' ext.HALF_FLOAT_OES (16-bit float), requires OES_texture_half_float
'float' gl.FLOAT (32-bit float), requires OES_texture_float

Notes

  • If neither color nor colors is specified, then color attachments are created automatically.
  • shape, radius, and width/height are alternative (and mutually exclusive) means for setting the size of the framebuffer.

Relevant WebGL APIs

Framebuffer update

Like all other objects, a framebuffer can be updated in place:

var framebuffer = regl.framebuffer(3, 4)

framebuffer({
  shape: [8, 10],
  depth: false
})
Framebuffer binding

For convenience it is possible to bind a framebuffer directly. This is a short cut for creating a command which sets the framebuffer:

var framebuffer = regl.framebuffer(5)

framebuffer.use(function () {
  // now we can draw to the framebuffer
})

//
// This is the same as doing the following:
//
var setFBO = regl({
  framebuffer: framebuffer
})

setFBO(function () {
  // .. same situation as above
})
Framebuffer resize

Framebuffers can be resized using the .resize() method. This method will also modify all of the framebuffer's attachments.

var framebuffer = regl.framebuffer(20, 4)

framebuffer.resize(3, 3)

// set both width and height to 3.
framebuffer.resize(3)

Framebuffer destructor

Calling .destroy() on a framebuffer removes it and recursively destroys any non-shared attachments.

fbo.destroy()

Relevant WebGL APIs


Cubic frame buffers

Cube framebuffer constructor

var cubeFbo = regl.framebufferCube(512)

var cubeAlt = regl.framebufferCube({
  radius: 32,
  color: regl.cube(32),
  depth: false,
  stencil: false
})
Property Description Default
shape Sets the dimensions [width, height] for each face of the cube. Width must equal height.
radius Sets the dimensions radius x radius for each face of the cube.
width Sets the width dimension for each face of the cube. Must equal height. gl.drawingBufferWidth
height Sets the height dimension for each face of the cube. Must equal width. gl.drawingBufferHeight
color/colors A TextureCube or array of TextureCubes for the color attachment.
depth If boolean, toggles the depth attachment. If texture, sets the depth attachment. true
stencil If boolean, toggles the stencil attachment. If texture, sets the stencil attachment. true
depthStencil If boolean, toggles both the depth and stencil attachments. If texture, sets the combined depth/stencil attachment. true
colorFormat Sets the format of the color buffer. Ignored if color is specified. 'rgba'
colorType Sets the type of the color buffer. 'uint8'
colorCount Sets the number of color buffers. Values > 1 require WEBGL_draw_buffers 1
depthTexture Toggles whether depth/stencil attachments should be in texture. Requires WEBGL_depth_texture false
Color format Description Attachment
'rgba' gl.RGBA Texture
Color type Description
'uint8' gl.UNSIGNED_BYTE
'half float' ext.HALF_FLOAT_OES (16-bit float), requires OES_texture_half_float
'float' gl.FLOAT (32-bit float), requires OES_texture_float

Notes

  • The specified depth/stencil/depth-stencil attachment will be reused for all 6 cube faces.
  • shape, radius, and width/height are alternative (and mutually exclusive) means for setting the size of the framebuffer.

Cube framebuffer update

// reinitialize
fboCube({
  radius: 10
})
Cube framebuffer resize
fboCube.resize(16)

Cube framebuffer destructor

fboCube.destroy()

Other tasks

Other than draw commands and resources, there are a few miscellaneous parts of the WebGL API which REGL wraps for completeness.


Clear the draw buffer

regl.clear combines gl.clearColor, gl.clearDepth, gl.clearStencil and gl.clear into a single procedure, which has the following usage:

regl.clear({
  color: [0, 0, 0, 1],
  depth: 1,
  stencil: 0
})
Property Description
color Sets the clear color
depth Sets the clear depth value
stencil Sets the clear stencil value
framebuffer Sets the target framebuffer to clear (if unspecified, uses the current framebuffer object)

If an option is not present, then the corresponding buffer is not cleared

Relevant WebGL APIs


Reading pixels

// read entire screen
var snapshot = regl.read()

// Can also reuse a buffer by passing it to regl.read()
var bytes = new Uint8Array(100)
regl.read(bytes)

// It is also possible to specify a region to read from
var pixels = regl.read({
  x: 2,
  y: 3,
  width: 3,
  height: 1,
  data: new Uint8Array(12)
})

// You can also read from the currently bound fbo.
// Note that `pixels` will be of type `Float32Array`
// in this case.
fbo = regl.framebuffer({
  width: W,
  height: H,
  colorFormat: 'rgba',
  colorType: 'float'
})
regl({framebuffer: fbo})(() => {
  regl.clear({color: [0.5, 0.25, 0.5, 0.25]})
  var pixels = regl.read()
})
Property Description Default
data An optional ArrayBufferView which gets the result of reading the pixels null
x The x-offset of the upper-left corner of the rectangle in pixels 0
y The y-offset of the upper-left corner of the rectangle in pixels 0
width The width of the rectangle in pixels Current framebuffer width
height The height of the rectangle in pixels Current framebuffer height
framebuffer Sets the framebuffer to read pixels from The currently bound framebuffer

Notes

  • In order to read pixels from the drawing buffer, you must create your webgl context with preserveDrawingBuffer set to true. If this is not set, then regl.read will throw an exception.

  • You can only read pixels from a framebuffer of type 'uint8' or 'float'. Furthermore, it is not possible to read from a renderbuffer.

Relevant WebGL APIs


Per-frame callbacks

regl also provides a common wrapper over requestAnimationFrame and cancelAnimationFrame that integrates gracefully with context loss events. regl.frame() also calls gl.flush and drains several internal buffers, so you should try to do all your rendering to the drawing buffer within the frame callback.

// Hook a callback to run each frame
var tick = regl.frame(function (context) {

  // context is the default state of the regl context variables

  // ...
})

// When we are done, we can unsubscribe by calling cancel on the callback
tick.cancel()

It is possible to manage framecallbacks manually, however before any loop it is essential to call regl.poll() which updates all timers and viewports.


Extensions

In regl, extensions must be declared before they can be used. An extension may be specified as a 'hard' requirement, meaning that if it is not present then context creation fails or as a 'soft' requirement. This can be done by passing a list of extensions to the extensions and optionalExtensions fields in the regl constructor respectively.

require('regl')({
  extensions: ['OES_texture_float'],
  optionalExtensions: ['oes_texture_float_linear'],
  onDone: function (err, regl) {
    if (err) {
      console.log(err)
      return
    }

    // now we can use regl as usual

    if (regl.hasExtension('oes_texture_float_linear')) {
      // can use texture float linear
    }
  }
})

The method regl.hasExtension() can be used to test if an extension is present. Arguments to regl.hasExtension() are case insensitive.

For more information on WebGL extensions, see the WebGL extension registry.

Relevant WebGL APIs


Device capabilities and limits

regl exposes info about the WebGL context limits and capabilities via the regl.limits object. The following properties are supported,

Property Description
colorBits An array of bits depths for the red, green, blue and alpha channels
depthBits Bit depth of drawing buffer
stencilBits Bit depth of stencil buffer
subpixelBits gl.SUBPIXEL_BITS
extensions A list of all supported extensions
maxAnisotropic Maximum number of anisotropic filtering samples
maxDrawbuffers Maximum number of draw buffers
maxColorAttachments Maximum number of color attachments
pointSizeDims gl.ALIASED_POINT_SIZE_RANGE
lineWidthDims gl.ALIASED_LINE_WIDTH_RANGE
maxViewportDims gl.MAX_VIEWPORT_DIMS
maxCombinedTextureUnits gl.MAX_COMBINED_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS
maxCubeMapSize gl.MAX_CUBE_MAP_TEXTURE_SIZE
maxRenderbufferSize gl.MAX_RENDERBUFFER_SIZE
maxTextureUnits gl.MAX_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS
maxTextureSize gl.MAX_TEXTURE_SIZE
maxAttributes gl.MAX_VERTEX_ATTRIBS
maxVertexUniforms gl.MAX_VERTEX_UNIFORM_VECTORS
maxVertexTextureUnits gl.MAX_VERTEX_TEXTURE_IMAGE_UNITS
maxVaryingVectors gl.MAX_VARYING_VECTORS
maxFragmentUniforms gl.MAX_FRAGMENT_UNIFORM_VECTORS
glsl gl.SHADING_LANGUAGE_VERSION
renderer gl.RENDERER
vendor gl.VENDOR
version gl.VERSION
textureFormats A list of all supported texture formats
readFloat If reading float numbers is supported
npotTextureCube If non power of two cube texture dimensions are supported

Relevant WebGL APIs


Performance metrics

regl tracks several metrics for performance monitoring. These can be read using the regl.stats object:

Metric Meaning
bufferCount The number of array buffers currently allocated
elementsCount The number of element buffers currently allocated
framebufferCount The number of framebuffers currently allocated
shaderCount The number of shaders currently allocated
textureCount The number of textures currently allocated
cubeCount The number of cube maps currently allocated
renderbufferCount The number of renderbuffers currently allocated
maxTextureUnits The maximum number of texture units used
getTotalTextureSize() The total amount of memory allocated for textures and cube maps
getTotalBufferSize() The total amount of memory allocated for array buffers and element buffers
getTotalRenderbufferSize() The total amount of memory allocated for renderbuffers
getMaxUniformsCount() The maximum number of uniforms in any shader
getMaxAttributesCount() The maximum number of attributes in any shader

Notes

  • The functions getTotalTextureSize, getTotalBufferSize, getTotalRenderbufferSize, getMaxUniformsCount, and getMaxAttributesCount are only available if regl is initialized with the option profile: true.

Clocks and timers

It may be desirable to synchronize external events (like button presses or mouse movements) with the internal timer in regl. To sample the current time stamp outside of the frame callback you can use the following command:

// Samples current timestamp of regl's local clock
regl.now()

Clean up

When a regl context is no longer needed, it can be destroyed releasing all associated resources with the following command:

regl.destroy()

Context loss

regl makes a best faith effort to handle context loss by default. This means that buffers and textures are reinitialized on a context restore with their contents. This can be done using the context loss events exposed by regl. For example:

var regl = require('regl')()

regl.on('lost', function () {
  console.log('lost webgl context')
})

regl.on('restore', function () {
  console.log('webgl context restored')
})

Unsafe escape hatch

WARNING: regl is designed in such a way that you should never have to directly access the underlying WebGL context. However, if you really absolutely need to do this for some reason (for example to interface with an external library), you can still get a reference to the WebGL context. Note though that if you do this you will need to restore the regl state in order to prevent rendering errors. This can be done with the following unsafe methods:

// This retrieves a reference to the underlying WebGL context (don't do this!)
var gl = regl._gl

//  ... do some crazy direct manipulation here

// now restore the regl state
regl._refresh()

// Resume using regl as normal

Note that you must call regl._refresh() if you have changed the WebGL state.


Tips

The following are some random tips for writing WebGL programs. Some are regl specific and some are more generic.

Reuse commands

Creating commands in regl is expensive because regl does many complex optimizations up front in order to ensure the best possible performance. As a result, it is expected that users should declare commands once and then call them many times. For example:

// Good usage:
var command = regl({
  vert: `...`,
  frag: `...`
})

regl.frame(() => {
  command()
})

Do not generate a command in your frame loop:

// BAD! Do not do this!
regl.frame(() => {
  // This creates a new command object and executes it each frame.
  // It will be very slow.
  regl({
    vert: `...`,
    frag: `...`
  })()
})

Reuse resources (buffers, elements, textures, etc.)

Similarly, you should reuse buffers and textures wherever possible. If you are continually uploading data to the GPU you should reuse whatever buffers or textures you can. For example, suppose you want to play a video. Then it is better to reuse the buffer as follows:

// Get a reference to the video element
const myVideo = document.querySelector('video')

// Create a video texture
const videoTexture = regl.texture(myVideo)

regl.frame(() => {
  // Update the frames of the video
  videoTexture.subimage(myVideo)
})

For dynamic buffers or elements, remember to allocate them using stream or dynamic usage.

Preallocate memory

The most common cause of jank in JavaScript applications is garbage collection. In general, the only way to avoid this is to not allocate temporary objects. To avoid this in regl you can reuse parameter objects which are passed to commands and preallocate arrays/matrices.

Removing assertions

By default, regl is compiled with a number of assertions, checks and validations to make it easier to find and fix errors. However these assertions will increase your code size and in some cases may slightly slow things down. Fortunately, they can be removed with the help of a transform in bin/remove-check.

Profiling tips

If your application is running too slow and you want to understand what is going on, regl provides many hooks which you can use to monitor and debug your performance.

Context loss mitigation

A WebGL application must be prepared to lose context at any time. This is an unfortunate part of life when working on the web. If this happens regl will make a best faith effort to recover functionality after the context is restored, however it is still up to the user to handle this situation.

Use batch mode

If you want to draw a bunch of copies of the same object, only with different properties, be sure to use batch mode. Commands rendered in batch mode can be optimized by avoiding certain state checks which are required for serial commands.