Version: 2021.3
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Understanding shader performance
Debugging shaders using Visual Studio

Optimizing shader runtime performance

Different platforms have vastly different performance capabilities; a high-end PC GPU can handle much more in terms of graphics and shadersA program that runs on the GPU. More info
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than a low-end mobile GPU. The same is true even on a single platform; a fast GPU is dozens of times faster than a slow integrated GPU.

GPU performance on mobile platforms and low-end PCs is likely to be much lower than on your development machine. It’s recommended that you manually optimize your shaders to reduce calculations and texture reads, in order to get good performance across low-end GPU machines. For example, some built-in Shader objectsAn instance of the Shader class, a Shader object is container for shader programs and GPU instructions, and information that tells Unity how to use them. Use them with materials to determine the appearance of your scene. More info
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have “mobile” equivalents that are much faster, but have some limitations or approximations.

This page contains information on optimizing your shaders for runtime performance.

Only compute what you need

The more computations and processing your shader code needs to do, the more it will impact the performance of your game. For example, supporting color per material is nice to make a shader more flexible, but if you always leave that color set to white then useless computations are performed for each vertex or pixelThe smallest unit in a computer image. Pixel size depends on your screen resolution. Pixel lighting is calculated at every screen pixel. More info
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rendered on screen.

The frequency of computations will also impact the performance of your game. Usually there are many more pixels rendered (and subsequently more pixel shader executions) than there are vertices (vertex shader executions), and more vertices than objects being rendered. Where possible, move computations out of the pixel shader code into the the vertex shaderA program that runs on each vertex of a 3D model when the model is being rendered. More info
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code, or move them out of shaders completely and set the values in a script.

Precision of computations

When writing shaders in Cg/HLSL, there are three basic number types: float, half and fixed (see Data Types and Precision).

For good performance, always use the lowest precision that is possible. This is especially important on lower-end hardware. Good rules of thumb are:

  • For world space positions and texture coordinates, use float precision.
  • For everything else (vectors, HDR colors, etc.), start with half precision. Increase only if necessary.
  • For very simple operations on texture data, use fixed precision.

In practice, exactly which number type you should use for depends on the platform and the GPU. Generally speaking:

  • All modern desktop GPUs will always compute everything in full float precision, so float/half/fixed end up being exactly the same underneath. This can make testing difficult, as it’s harder to see if half/fixed precision is really enough, so always test your shaders on the target device for accurate results.
  • Mobile GPUs have actual half precision support. This is usually faster, and uses less power to do calculations.
  • Fixed precision is generally only useful for older mobile GPUs. Most modern GPUs (the ones that can run OpenGL ES 3 or Metal) internally treat fixed and half precision exactly the same.

See Data Types and Precision for more details.

Complex mathematical operations

Transcendental mathematical functions (such as pow, exp, log, cos, sin, tan) are quite resource-intensive, so avoid using them where possible on low-end hardware. Consider using lookup textures as an alternative to complex math calculations if applicable.

Avoid writing your own operations (such as normalize, dot, inversesqrt). Unity’s built-in options ensure that the driver can generate much better code. Remember that the Alpha Test (discard) operation often makes your fragment shader slower.

Optimized Surface Shaders

Surface ShadersA streamlined way of writing shaders for the Built-in Render Pipeline. More info
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are great for writing shaders that interact with lighting. However, their default options are tuned to cover a broad number of general cases. Tweak these for specific situations to make shaders run faster or at least be smaller:

  • The approxview directive for shaders that use view direction (i.e. Specular) makes the view direction normalized per vertex instead of per pixel. This is approximate, but often good enough.
  • The halfasview for Specular shader types is even faster. The half-vector (halfway between lighting direction and view vector) is computed and normalized per vertex, and the lighting function receives the half-vector as a parameter instead of the view vector.
  • noforwardadd makes a shader fully support one-directional light in Forward renderingA rendering path that renders each object in one or more passes, depending on lights that affect the object. Lights themselves are also treated differently by Forward Rendering, depending on their settings and intensity. More info
    See in Glossary
    only. The rest of the lights can still have an effect as per-vertex lights or spherical harmonics. This is great to make your shader smaller and make sure it always renders in one pass, even with multiple lights present.
  • noambient disables ambient lighting and spherical harmonics lights on a shader. This can make performance slightly faster.

Alpha Testing

The fixed-function AlphaTest - or its programmable equivalent, clip() - has different performance characteristics on different platforms:

  • Generally you gain a small advantage when using it to remove totally transparent pixels on most platforms.
  • However, on PowerVR GPUs found in iOSApple’s mobile operating system. More info
    See in Glossary
    and some Android devices, alpha testing is resource-intensive. Do not try to use it for performance optimization on these platforms, as it causes the game to run slower than usual.

Color Mask

On some platforms (mostly mobile GPUs found in iOS and Android devices), using ColorMask to leave out some channels (e.g. ColorMask RGB) can be resource-intensive, so only use it if really necessary.

Understanding shader performance
Debugging shaders using Visual Studio
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