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A beginner-friendly Vulkan path tracing tutorial in under 300 lines of C++.

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vk_mini_path_tracer

A relatively small, beginner-friendly path tracing tutorial.

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This tutorial is a beginner-friendly introduction to writing your own fast, photorealistic path tracer in less than 300 lines of C++ code and 250 lines of GLSL shader code using Vulkan. Here's an example of what you'll render at the end of this tutorial!

Vulkan is a low-level API for programming GPUs – fast, highly parallel processors. It works on a wide variety of platforms – everything from workstations, to gaming consoles, to tablets and mobile phones, to edge devices.

Vulkan is usually known as a complex API, but I believe that when presented in the right way, it's possible to make learning Vulkan accessible to people of all skill levels, whether they're never programmed graphics before or whether they're a seasoned rendering engineer. Perhaps surprisingly, one of the best ways to introduce Vulkan may be with GPU path tracing, because the API involved is relatively small.

We'll show how to write a small path tracer, using the NVVK helpers, included in the nvpro-samples framework, to help with some Vulkan calls when needed. For advanced readers, we'll also optionally talk about performance tips and some of the implementation details inside the helpers and Vulkan itself.

The final program uses less than 300 lines of C++ and less than 250 lines of GLSL shader code, including comments. You can find it here.

Here are all the Vulkan functions, and NVVK functions and objects, that we'll use in the main tutorial:

Vulkan Functions
vkAllocateCommandBuffers vkBeginCommandBuffer vkCmdBindDescriptorSets
vkCmdBindPipeline vkCmdDispatch vkCmdFillBuffer
vkCmdPipelineBarrier vkCreateCommandPool vkCreateComputePipelines
vkDestroyCommandPool vkDestroyPipeline vkDestroyShaderModule
vkFreeCommandBuffers vkGetBufferDeviceAddress vkQueueSubmit
vkQueueWaitIdle vkUpdateDescriptorSets
NVVK Functions and Objects
nvvk::Buffer NVVK_CHECK nvvk::Context
nvvk::ContextCreateInfo nvvk::createShaderModule nvvk::DescriptorSetContainer
nvvk::RayTracingBuilderKHR nvvk::ResourceAllocatorDedicated

Chapters

Chapter
small
Hello, Vulkan!
small
Device Extensions and Vulkan Objects
small
Memory and Commands
small
Writing an Image
small
Compute Shaders
small
Descriptors
small
Acceleration Structures and Ray Tracing
small
Four Uses of Intersection Data
small
Accessing Mesh Data
small
Perfectly Specular Reflections
small
Antialiasing and Pseudorandom Number Generation
small
Diffuse Reflection

Extra Chapters

These are optional, extra tutorials that show how to polish and add new features to the main tutorial's path tracer. Make sure to check out the list of further Vulkan and ray tracing resources at the end of the main tutorial as well!

Extra Chapter

Gaussian Filter Antialiasing

Measuring Performance

Compaction

Including Files and Matching Values Between C++ And GLSL

Push Constants

More Samples

Images

Debug Names

Instances and Transformation Matrices

Multiple Materials

Ray Tracing Pipelines

Building and Running

Please see the instructions here.

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A beginner-friendly Vulkan path tracing tutorial in under 300 lines of C++.

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