Blazingly Fast Greedy Mesher - Voxel Engine Optimizations

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
85 451 Рет қаралды

This greedy mesher is blazingly fast. Written with Rust and Bevy, using clever bitwise operations we can generate chunk meshes, an average of 0.000195 per 32x32x32 mesh!!!
This mesher blows most culled meshers out of the water, and I want to teach you the "secrets" of how to implement this for own voxel engine.
There are 2 algorithms we'll explore:
Binary greedy meshing AND binary face culling.
IT'S OPEN SOURCE!
github.com/TanTanDev/binary_g...
Resources:
Greedy Meshing Voxels Fast - Optimism in Design Handmade Seattle 2022: • Greedy Meshing Voxels ...
C++ binary greedy mesher repository: github.com/cgerikj/binary-gre...
Simplified greedy mesher article: vercidium.com/blog/voxel-worl...
My discord group:
/ discord
Want to support me?
⁍ Patreon: / tantandev
⁍ Monero: 43Ktj1Bd4Nkaj4fdx6nPvBZkJewcPjxPB9nafnepM7SdGtcU6rhpxyLiV9w3k92rE1UqHTr4BNqe2ScsK1eEENvZDC3W1ur
0:00 blazingly fast
0:30 but why?
2:56 greedy meshing algorithm
4:23 indexing?
4:52 binary data
5:43 code: binary greedy meshing
7:44 chunk slicing
10:14 why it's slow
11:24 WORLDS FASTEST binary greedy mesher
19:43 why it's fast
21:01 interesting findings
22:22 resources
#rustlang #gamedev #programming

Пікірлер
  • Hi! I wrote the "Binary greedy meshing" algorithm. Very cool to see this video on my youtube frontpage today, I love your video and explanations :)

    @cosmo9762@cosmo976225 күн бұрын
    • glad to see people are finally seeing this now! It definitely deserves more attention

      @samuelcollier1764@samuelcollier176425 күн бұрын
    • I was skeptical at first, but after some digging, damn you really are the guy that wrote the mesh algorithm 4 years ago. Nice!

      @nicholasfinch4087@nicholasfinch408724 күн бұрын
  • You just casually made a spatially mapped datamodel lol

    @MrSofazocker@MrSofazocker25 күн бұрын
    • What part of this video was casual lol

      @daddy7860@daddy786024 күн бұрын
    • @@daddy7860 The way he explained it felt like a friend explaining something to me rather than a teacher explaining.

      @notthetruedm@notthetruedm24 күн бұрын
    • yep. just to remake minecraft. this is what people do on the internet.. its awesome.

      @Pockeywn@Pockeywn23 күн бұрын
    • ​@@notthetruedm the best way to learn

      @yaboiminecraff@yaboiminecraff22 күн бұрын
  • Thanks for the video, I can advise you not to make a greedy mesh for each type of block, but to make for all complete solid blocks, and then transfer to the GPU data structure with the help of which you can calculate the block type and texture by pixel position, it will simplify the mesh many times as well as the algorithm itself.

    @redfatcatz@redfatcatz25 күн бұрын
    • ah, this makes sense

      @tommycard4569@tommycard456925 күн бұрын
    • I'd love to see the speed comparison on that, sounds promising!!

      @CaptTerrific@CaptTerrific25 күн бұрын
    • Is it really faster to do that lookup in the fragment shader than it is to store it in the vertex data or look it up in the vertex shader?

      @charltonrodda@charltonrodda25 күн бұрын
    • @@CaptTerrific Saves a hashmap entry access for every voxel. bets on 4x speed.

      @raffimolero64@raffimolero6424 күн бұрын
    • Same for lighting and ambient occlusion

      @TheSliderW@TheSliderW22 күн бұрын
  • I now fully understand the concepts used to achieve such high performance. I also fully understand that if I were to try to write it. Every line of code would have an off-by-one error.

    @Siphonife@Siphonife25 күн бұрын
  • Found a way to make it even faster: you are initializing the 2 initial vectors with chunk_size_p³, but it can also be done with chunk_size_p² because the 3rd dimension is in the bits. this way you can use arrays because there is no longer a stack overflow

    @CSPciccionsstibilepippons@CSPciccionsstibilepippons23 күн бұрын
  • When you explained the part in 14:40, where you explained how to find the faces looking right just by modify an interger, I was so surprise at how simple it is an yet amazingly complex

    @notthetruedm@notthetruedm24 күн бұрын
    • My thought right there was "oh, is this edge detection?" It was a really intuitive explanation

      @110110010@11011001018 күн бұрын
  • this is insane! i have my own culled and greedy meshing implementations and i know they're not the fastest, but i'd never have thought it could get THIS fast. you could literally remesh every chunk every frame with this and still get good fps, which is mind-boggling. good job with the explanations, too.

    @PikkelP@PikkelP25 күн бұрын
  • This video is honestly so well explained and even though I don't know anything about voxel engines or game development I was able to understand it. This is probably one of the best resources for making a voxel engine. If I ever make one, I'll probably take a look at this again, thanks for your amazing work!

    @Unbreathable@Unbreathable25 күн бұрын
  • You can speed up the data setup part by using stack arrays instead of using "Vec"s

    @user-ms6cc6ft3k@user-ms6cc6ft3k25 күн бұрын
    • oh yeah definitely since the array size is a known value, and doesn't need to be resized. and is small enough to fit into stack.

      @minecraftermad@minecraftermad25 күн бұрын
    • CHUNK_SIZE_P3 = 34*34*34, so the size of axis_cols is 3*34*34*34*64 = 7,546,368 bits. Additionally, we need twice that for col_face_masks, giving ~2.83MB. Honestly, I don't know whether this will fit on the stack or not. Maybe someone else can provide additional information?

      @0x4849@0x484925 күн бұрын
    • ​@@0x4849 I believe max stack size can be changed when compiling, but the default is usually not very large. I would instead preallocate the vector once and then always use that one instance

      @lengors7327@lengors732725 күн бұрын
    • @@0x4849 I had a program where I had an array of 5 Mb. So 2.83MB should be feasible. Also, the memory can be static. We really just need to benchmark the approaches and choose the best one

      @user-ms6cc6ft3k@user-ms6cc6ft3k25 күн бұрын
    • 2.83mb should be feasible. I had a program that used 5mb for a stack array 😅. The memory can also be shared between calls whatever it's stack or heap based. Different approaches should be benched and there should be a room for improvement

      @user-ms6cc6ft3k@user-ms6cc6ft3k25 күн бұрын
  • Oh my god I wish i had this video like 2 months ago when i was trying to write a greedy mesher. Thank you so much for this resource! Will definetly save it for the future!!

    @nanda_gamedev@nanda_gamedev25 күн бұрын
  • This is incredible! I did something extremely close to this for counting strings within DNA sequences and got immense speedup. Binary manipulation is insanely speedy if you can comprehend it. Great job figuring this out and explaining it.

    @14corman46@14corman4619 күн бұрын
  • Looking at this made me realise that I clearly need to lurn bitwise manipulation

    @jeanlouis5619@jeanlouis561925 күн бұрын
    • It's actually genuinely fun if you like puzzles. A lot of it is figuring out how to visualize it so you can figure out what's going on because the final product is always undecipherable (at least for me).

      @DanKaschel@DanKaschel25 күн бұрын
    • It's honestly amazing how many usecases there are for bitwise operations, I think at least some understanding, even if only basic, should be a core skill of any serious developer.

      @DreadKyller@DreadKyller23 күн бұрын
    • if you know all these quirky things you can figure out pretty quickly that an odd number is determined by its first bit

      @memes_gbc674@memes_gbc6747 күн бұрын
    • @@memes_gbc674 assuming you understand endianness and therefore which bit is "first"

      @DanKaschel@DanKaschel7 күн бұрын
    • @@DanKaschel that too

      @memes_gbc674@memes_gbc6747 күн бұрын
  • i love everything about this your awkward presentation, the handdrawn sketches, the weird pronounciation, the focus on speed, your manbun, your long hair that makes you look like a metalhead, the jokes, the effort you made, everything, everything in this video is just *right* .

    @GeorgeTsiros@GeorgeTsiros11 күн бұрын
  • Use an array for the data instead of a vector (since you know exactly how many entries it will contain) and it should have essentially zero allocation time since it'll be allocated on the stack instead of the heap

    @theStumblinbear@theStumblinbear25 күн бұрын
    • It doesn't fit on the stack on linux it's to large! But here is the funny thing... Someone noticed I'm allocating WAY more memory than was actually used. And now it does fit on the stack :) So I've changed it. The performance difference was only minimal though.

      @Tantandev@Tantandev17 күн бұрын
  • This is some Big Brain Calculation right here, great video Tantan!

    @bassguitarbill@bassguitarbill25 күн бұрын
  • Thank you Tantan for somehow releasing a video on the exact topic I was worried about for my next project, very cool.

    @HoloTheDrunk@HoloTheDrunk25 күн бұрын
  • Man amazing video. You made it sound so hard but I feel like I grasp all of it pretty well. The visuals make it soo much easy to follow, hats off to your work.

    @p1tayaa@p1tayaa25 күн бұрын
  • Now do it with SIMD

    @mek101whatif7@mek101whatif725 күн бұрын
    • At least on x86, bitwise operations like count trailing/leading zeros are only available on the more recent AVX-512 processors, so adding SIMD might make it faster of their friend's CPU, but could actually make it slower in parts on their own. There are probably some places where it'd be beneficial anyways though.

      @angeldude101@angeldude10117 күн бұрын
    • @@angeldude101 you sure about that? Let me check... FELIIIIIX, WE NEED YOUR SITE AGAIN

      @GeorgeTsiros@GeorgeTsiros11 күн бұрын
  • Great video! I wrote a basic algorithm for doing this on culled meshes, but I'm glad to see it's possible with greedy meshes too!

    @Iridescence@Iridescence25 күн бұрын
  • Wow man, mad props. That was some heavy stuff and yiu actually explained it extremely well. Thanks, and keep up the good work!

    @thaddaeusmarkle1665@thaddaeusmarkle166523 күн бұрын
  • I'm making a game that has voxels and I implemented this also using Rust and something very similar to the slow approach. This video came out with such a great timing. Thanks for sharing this. Maybe it can be even faster if SIMD or parallelization are included? 😁

    @Gin2761@Gin276125 күн бұрын
  • phenomenal video explaining this. you are very good at explaning these topics

    @gregbigwood4532@gregbigwood453225 күн бұрын
  • What a coincidence, I currently need a good voxel algorithm for my project :D Will definitely look into it! thanks

    @zy-blade@zy-blade25 күн бұрын
  • Just want you to kmow that this video was so good that at 11:27 there was a solid 5 seconds where I actually scrambled to rewind the video to try to desperately see the code

    @bosine9431@bosine943125 күн бұрын
  • I came from Dani's video, and I'm glad I did :) Great video!

    @Cluxiu@Cluxiu20 күн бұрын
  • I haven’t tried greedy meshing but I’ve seen some demos of greedy meshes where it doesn’t care about block type, it constructs the triangles while remembering where the different block types are, so it’s possible to make the greedy meshes not slow down when you increase the block type count

    @sturdyfool103@sturdyfool10325 күн бұрын
  • You succeeded very well in explaining something complex in a simple manner! Well done!

    @Teflora@Teflora24 күн бұрын
  • Now i understood why this video take a while to be made! This was a really good video!

    @konkitoman@konkitoman25 күн бұрын
  • The brings back memories. I recognized some code I wrote about 15 years ago after being blown away by Minecraft. The & operation on the shifted bits specifically. The merging of the meshes was clever and much better than what I ever came up with. I put it all in a fancy octree though so I only rendered on-screen chunks. I hit a brick wall getting the lighting to work on merged meshes and it all fell apart once I had more than, say, 6 block types. Your code will do so too. But it's a great exercise and good job. A more modern way would no doubt be raycasting, there are many more triangles than pixels on the screen if you scale things up and it parallelizes better. Nice video, keep them coming!

    @LuciFur-wz8rc@LuciFur-wz8rc23 күн бұрын
  • You explained this really well! Thanks!

    @a1r592@a1r59224 күн бұрын
  • It's like a gift for me. It was a problem no matter how much I optimized it before but now I have no problem loading and rendering faster than before. thanks for your video

    @heryu2630@heryu263018 күн бұрын
  • If your friends CPU has significantly larger L2 or L3 cache, the performance difference could perhaps be cache misses? Aligning data for CPU cache optimization is another beast to tackle though 😅

    @FM-kl7oc@FM-kl7oc25 күн бұрын
    • I think it's possible to enable larger memory pages in some compilers.

      @AmaroqStarwind@AmaroqStarwind11 күн бұрын
  • WOW you did a really phenomenal job at explaining your algorithm

    @Kevroa1@Kevroa125 күн бұрын
  • BLAZINGLY FAST

    @macawls@macawls25 күн бұрын
  • Woah, love the bit shift and negation. That's a great way to generate the culling indices instead of iterating through every single block.

    @lukejagg@lukejagg17 күн бұрын
  • I dont watch your videos (but still subscribed (I want to learn rust&bevy some day)), but every time I see your videos it feels like a new scientific experiment.

    @eugenech.2450@eugenech.245011 күн бұрын
  • I like how you mostly pronounce "Chunk" as "Shunk", always made me smile :D

    @admexir@admexir20 күн бұрын
  • Less go. great video as always sensei

    @beppvis@beppvis24 күн бұрын
  • This is so cool and such a good explanation.

    @Gnomable@Gnomable20 күн бұрын
  • 15:04 this was the point I verbally said “this guys psychotic” but in a good way. This is a crazy way to think about this data but it makes so much sense! Good work man!

    @OctagonalSquare@OctagonalSquare22 күн бұрын
  • You're using bitwise operations to calculate binary derivatives. That's dope :')

    @sentinelav@sentinelav20 күн бұрын
  • That is cool revelation and use of bits.

    @meanmole3212@meanmole321223 күн бұрын
  • I would love to see a full bevy tutorial on your channel

    @katech6020@katech602023 күн бұрын
  • Love this. I remember building a 2048 AI and going from loop-type grid transformations to bitwise operations. Bitwise stuff is hard to grok but there are sooo many orders of magnitude of improvement and it's so satisfying :)

    @DanKaschel@DanKaschel25 күн бұрын
    • I love how other SQL devs look at me when I explain my stored procs that utilize bitmap logic to be a million times faster than the naive approach to the same problem.

      @magfal@magfal24 күн бұрын
    • @@magfal umm. I think I'd do the same if a colleague said they were using bit manipulation in a stored proc

      @DanKaschel@DanKaschel24 күн бұрын
    • @@DanKaschel Calculating using the bitwise code and returning the final result set in postgres put less load on the postgres server than serving the data it's based on to application code, which then had to run the calculations. This is true quite often for OLAP style workloads.

      @magfal@magfal24 күн бұрын
    • @@magfal that is true, but it'd have to be pretty niche before performance trumped maintainability

      @DanKaschel@DanKaschel21 күн бұрын
    • @@DanKaschel a 10 line comment was enough for my colleague to understand and confidently make adjustments for a new requirment. Bitwise code isn't magic or that hard to do when you know the incoming data, the result, the intended behavior and you've got the code in front of you. And to go from a batch job ran once a month to an on demand real time task is quite important when the report directly generates revenue for it's users with more benefit being reaped the fresher the data being presented is.

      @magfal@magfal20 күн бұрын
  • You love to see it! I've also been optimizing the Rust code of my Chess engine, although this seems exponentially more complicated 😅

    @eboatwright_@eboatwright_25 күн бұрын
  • Amazing to see the level of performance you can get out of using the binary representation and this has me wondering if I can use any in my own projects. I suspect I will need something similar to create an AI navmesh in the near future. Fantastic video once again TanTan!

    @Skeffles@Skeffles21 күн бұрын
  • Amazing video!

    @sanderbos4243@sanderbos424325 күн бұрын
  • This is awesome! I'm looking forward to attempting to implement this myself. I'd love it if you would cover ambient occlusion in the future or at least provide some resources for where you learned about it

    @diontryban5645@diontryban564524 күн бұрын
  • Yes! He's back! Let's goooo!

    @oglothenerd@oglothenerd24 күн бұрын
  • this videos singlehandedly makes me wanna try to make a 3D game from scratch

    @uncertawn@uncertawn25 күн бұрын
  • damn i always had wanted to play around with bitwise manipulations, really cool video

    @iyxan2340@iyxan234024 күн бұрын
  • Funny and fascinating! Thank you!

    @arkin0x@arkin0x21 күн бұрын
  • Let's gooooooooooo...I love this series

    @Randalandradenunes@Randalandradenunes25 күн бұрын
  • Thanks to practicing image manipulation in JS, this was surprisingly easy to understand and clicked right away for me. 1D data models and traversal is not simple, so I understand your pain.

    @sotojared22@sotojared2222 күн бұрын
  • Impressive, very nice!

    @fanzaii@fanzaii25 күн бұрын
  • So nice, a new vid!!!!

    @grillad5@grillad525 күн бұрын
  • This is... beautiful

    @fuzzy-02@fuzzy-0224 күн бұрын
  • wow, this is actually inspiring

    @NoVIcE_Source@NoVIcE_Source25 күн бұрын
  • Loved the Flight of the Conchords reference

    @blinkblade6962@blinkblade696221 күн бұрын
  • 1:03 missed opportunity for the vsauce intro ost

    @downey2294@downey229418 күн бұрын
  • Several people have mentioned looking into SIMD optimization, but a few other ideas: 1) Using a fixed sized allocation instead of a Vec since the size is known. Not sure whether the entire arrays would fit on the stack but if so that may provide several speed improvements over a Vec on the heap. 2) It might be possible to combine both positive and negative edge detection into a single operation by using an XOR, but would require a slightly different method of iterating over them to pass into the greedy meshing. 3) Your structure for axis_cols has the data for each grid separated, a format similar as such: (y1, y2, y3, y4... x1, x2, x3, x4... z1, z2, z3, z4...) this means when setting the values you're writing into separate parts of the vec that might be far enough from each other to cause frequent cache misses. A layout where the three axis all are interwoven beside beside each others might be faster, such as (y1, x1, z1, y2, x2, z2, y3, x3, z3, y4, x4, z4...) 4) It would require a bit of rework but this seems very reasonably practical for a compute shader. 5) Would take a fair amount of work, but rethinking how you store the actual voxel data in general may make it faster to convert. 6) Again it would be a change in direction, but there are approaches people have taken where you can greedy mesh any flat surface, regardless of different types of blocks. The way that achieve this is usually to pack the color data for the chunk into a 3D texture and use it in the material/shader for the chunk mesh, then, rather than each triangle having a color, the fragment shader can use world coordinates to query from the color data as a 3D texture at the position of the face. Allowing a single triangle to have multiple colors on it. This makes the fragment shader slightly more complex, but in most examples of people using this technique it tends to improve performance in both rendering and construction because it can result in a massive reduction of polygons, especially as you add more and more materials.

    @DreadKyller@DreadKyller23 күн бұрын
  • Thak You! That video and research are so usefull! After watching your video, my greedy mesher looks so sloooooow :c

    @rinoturtle738@rinoturtle73825 күн бұрын
  • Lmao I wrote an algorithm yesterday for greedy meshing which does a bunch of neighbour checks for each block and then creates a bit mask from that. Definitely stealing the bitshifted comparison optimisation. This must be the most amazingly timed video I've ever seen.

    @LeBopperoni@LeBopperoni25 күн бұрын
  • 3:00 as I always say "paint is the most important software for software developers"

    @enrique6693@enrique669323 күн бұрын
  • Nice technique. Possible considerations for the future: - With SIMD you can implement masking for each block type without having to split them into different array. Though it does mean a hard limit on the block types and chunk size. - I'm pretty sure SIMD could be used to "instantly" (

    @Xaymar@Xaymar23 күн бұрын
    • ARM has a lot of SIMD instructions as well, if you find a common subset that gives you the operations you need and use the compiler's __builtin support you can do it for both platforms without any inline assembly.

      @danmerillat@danmerillat20 күн бұрын
    • Rust has a portable standard SIMD library, but it's considered unstable and requires the nightly compiler to use. In my experience though, it is very pleasant to use as-is, so it could be worth trying, at least behind a feature gate.

      @angeldude101@angeldude10117 күн бұрын
  • Excellent video. The animations are easy to follow along with. Thanks for sharing. I'm curious about the method you used to profile your code to determine the execution time of various sections. I didn't see any particular video in your catalog that seemed to cover this, so perhaps a "How Tantan profiles his Rust code" could be an idea for another video.

    @charetjc@charetjc24 күн бұрын
  • Отличное видео !!!

    @user-wr3dz2op1t@user-wr3dz2op1t25 күн бұрын
  • This voxel engine looks incredibly advanced and would make a brilliant base for games! For future videos I'd love to see you implement a scripting language into an existing Rust project like Lua or Angelscript.

    @btarg1@btarg125 күн бұрын
  • Amazing work, You can make this dramatically faster using SIMD now that its a bitwise op game

    @AmitBen@AmitBen25 күн бұрын
  • You can go farther. In my greedy mesher I store both block and ambient-occlusion lighting in textures, as bytes, using a bin-packing algorithm. One 2kx2k texture has always been enough, but I also added the ability to track which is needed by each chunk in case I needed many. This is particularly useful in city-like terrain where the geometry has a lot of flat faces made up of different types of blocks.

    @scotthooper6460@scotthooper646012 күн бұрын
  • when i see "blazingly" i know it's rust already.

    @mobslicer1529@mobslicer152922 күн бұрын
  • Epic games had a wonderful talk about nanite, and the part that blowed my mind is: Gpu’s are very slow at rendering extremely small triangles. So what they did? They just wrote a SOFTWARE RASTERIZER, that is faster than the hardware one I think when the size of a triangle is less then 40*40 pixels. The difference is really impactfull, and they showed the code and implementation for everybody to use it!

    @TimDrogin@TimDrogin24 күн бұрын
  • Amazing!

    @klevisimeri607@klevisimeri60724 күн бұрын
  • Babe wake up another tantan video has dropped

    @HanProgramer@HanProgramer25 күн бұрын
  • This is the same algorithm as bitmap edge detection. Shift-not-and-ing is really common in other applications 🤙

    @jamesalewis@jamesalewis8 күн бұрын
  • God damn bitwise wizards, I really have to learn how to use that stuff, because in theory I understand it, but I don't know how to use it

    @realdlps@realdlps25 күн бұрын
  • Thanks from a godot developer (csharp) this is very useful there as well since bitwise operations work very similarly and especially with multimesh instancing! Cheers :)

    @purplepixeleater@purplepixeleater25 күн бұрын
    • bitwise operators are basically universal, they aren't language specific, you can do them in every language I know of. So very useful and easily transferable skill to know.

      @DreadKyller@DreadKyller23 күн бұрын
  • Blazingly fast 🔥🚀

    @CielMC@CielMC4 күн бұрын
  • One final thought, if you use 30x30 chunks you can fit the left/right neighbors into a 32bit int rather than expanding to 64. It'd halve your memory bandwidth requirements at minimum and if you use SIMD it will let you double the number of calculations performed per cycle.

    @danmerillat@danmerillat20 күн бұрын
  • this is great

    @foxcirc@foxcirc24 күн бұрын
  • I wonder if the data layout could be improved as it looked like you use sequences of array indices that are far apart from another. Depending on how large the data is, this could theoretically lead to cache misses as not the entire array is loaded into the cache at the same time. But it's only 0.8% of runtime and the Compiler probably already optimizes this. But if there was a slowdown caused by cache misses, improving the data layout could speed up the code a lot

    @NabekenProG87@NabekenProG8725 күн бұрын
  • HES BACK

    @RealCrafter645@RealCrafter64525 күн бұрын
  • I watched this video and barely understood any of it, but it was a good watch

    @aaatsa27@aaatsa2717 күн бұрын
  • 16:30 🤯whooooa, kudos on visualizing that! That really clicked well! 👏 Also this is a bit of a loop-unrolling idea, not sure if the unexplained ambient occlusion part defeats it, but instead of iterating over the 6 axis separately could you iterate over just the 3 (X, Y, Z, no reverse) and do the reverse calculations in the same portion handling the same axis? So grouping X and XReverse into the same iteration. Honestly it's a shot in the dark, and it's also not even a major fraction of the computation time anymore even if it did somehow manage to shave any time, but figured I'd contribute something while I'm here 😅

    @mme725@mme72520 күн бұрын
  • Coincidentally I just implemented nearly the same thing a week ago, though I support octree blocks so it's a bit more involved, but cool to compare implementations. I made use of xor to detect my faces, never thought of just flipping the neighbor... My meshing ended up about 50% faster somehow after implementing it, even though it feels like more work is being done

    @zennii@zennii25 күн бұрын
    • The expression he did for his mesher is actually one half of an xor (A xor B = A*(!B) + (!A)*B), and since CPUs have built-in support for all binary operations, your algorithm does the work at once instead of going through it twice by choosing the two paths at once. The only caveat here being two bits are on instead of one, but that difference is irrelevant as they are guaranteed to be next to each other.

      @infinitasium@infinitasium24 күн бұрын
    • Interestingly I tried switching my system to just flipping bits instead of xor, I was already flipping the bits for another part so surely it should be free gains. Weirdly, it ended up very slightly slower which is perplexing. I don't think it's worth diving into it enough to find out why or what changes the compiler has here, but thought I'd note what I found...

      @zennii@zennii24 күн бұрын
  • Nice 🔥

    @bob450v4@bob450v425 күн бұрын
  • Very cool. I bet you can double the performance with some tweaks to how you manage memory. I see a lot allocations happening in loops when you could make 1 allocation outside the loop and reuse the variable for each cycle of the loop.

    @user-dm7sk5wf5w@user-dm7sk5wf5w12 күн бұрын
  • Pure beauty

    @ShinigamiZone@ShinigamiZone25 күн бұрын
  • I tried out the mesher in my own project with a different chunk storage scheme. I ran benchmarks on my project and got around 500 µs (microseconds) per chunk. When I ran your benchmark I was getting around 32 µs. Initially I thought it was just inefficiencies in retrieving voxel data since I'm using palette based compression. After some more testing I found that if I use your chunk generation code the benchmark result was around 50 µs. Turns out there's only a few solid voxels in the benchmark chunk which is why it runs much faster. The first chunk I tested/benchmarked had solid voxels in a sphere shape. Still my voxel retrievel from the chunk is significantly slower then simply indexing into a Vec. Mainly because I use bitpacking for the indices.

    @devpenguin0@devpenguin019 күн бұрын
  • Mine is faster I dont use any meshes just face information and send that to the gpu Then with a shader you can procedurally make vertices and triangles

    @UnifiedCode@UnifiedCode25 күн бұрын
  • My first idea was to just bitmask. If you have a 1x4 area and want to check the area next to it, it'd be far faster and cheaper to just get the area next to it, use the first one as a bit mask over it and if there are no differences then it's all good and you can proceed. If it isn't, you can check where the differences begin and then you can discard from the conflicting side and then keep going. Okay, seems like that's pretty much exactly what's done.

    @CottidaeSEA@CottidaeSEA11 күн бұрын
  • This was so clearly explained! You finally made me understand a usecase for bit-shifting!

    @ToonedMinecraft@ToonedMinecraft22 күн бұрын
  • Even before the OLC console game engine, back when computers didn't have bitmap graphics modes, all there was were "console" / terminal / text mode "graphics." You might be familiar with a game from that time called "Rogue," which is the "rogue" in "rougelike." :) What came before Fortnite? Gears of War. Before it? Unreal. What started it all? ZZT, a text mode DOS game from 1991. :D

    @SillyOrb@SillyOrb24 күн бұрын
  • Brilliant! how does splitting data by block type affect the memory footprint as more types are added tho? Is there an optimal sized chunk to limit the unique block types that can occur within each versus the number of iterations to cover every chunk?

    @tommycard4569@tommycard456925 күн бұрын
  • Wow! 🚀✨ This video is not just training, it's inspiration. Inspiration for all of us to keep striving to do better, faster and more efficiently. Inspiration to keep exploring, learning and growing. 🌟🚀 Thank you for this amazing experience! 💖🌐

    @olbld@olbld23 күн бұрын
    • Working with bitwise manipulation in the mesh algorithm was particularly interesting and opened up a new world of optimizations for me! I'm afraid my friends are going to have a tough time listening to the next week just about them! 😁 Really enjoyed the learning process) Hope this helps other developers. Great video!

      @olbld@olbld23 күн бұрын
  • Very very cool - gonna start on fire if you add more than 20 block types tho 😅

    @nathanfranck5822@nathanfranck582225 күн бұрын
  • Great... New video...

    @proton46@proton4625 күн бұрын
  • said it before, going to say it again: you should write a book ❤

    @samdavepollard@samdavepollard25 күн бұрын
  • I think this can be made even faster using SIMD-instructions. Most of these problems are similar to problems in parsing where I know that those instructions can make a big difference. Especially in that data preparation step.

    @superblaubeere27@superblaubeere2724 күн бұрын
  • Now write it in SIMD using WIDE bit registers. imagine what you could do with 4x256 bits :P

    @Siphonife@Siphonife25 күн бұрын
    • My goodness I don't think the world is prepared for that much power...

      @DreadKyller@DreadKyller23 күн бұрын
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