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Mesh shader is a relatively new concept of a programmable geometric shading pipeline, which promises to simplify the whole graphics rendering pipeline organization. NVIDIA introduced this concept with Turing back in 2018, and AMD joined with RDNA2. Today, thanks to the finds of Phoronix, we have gathered information that Intel's DG2 GPU will carry support for mesh shaders and bring it under Vulkan API. For starters, the difference between mesh/task and traditional graphics rendering pipeline is that the mesh edition is much simpler and offers higher scalability, bandwidth reduction, and greater flexibility in the design of mesh topology and graphics work. In Vulkan, the current mesh shader state is NVIDIA's contribution called the VK_NV_mesh_shader extension. The below docs explain it in greater detail:
Today's discovery shows that Intel's upcoming Arc Alchemist family of graphics cards based on DG2 GPU will not lag behind NVIDIA and AMD in terms of supported technical ecosystem. To learn more about mesh shader technology and some implementations, you can check out NVIDIA's developer blog here.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
Vulkan API documentation said:This extension provides a new mechanism allowing applications to generate collections of geometric primitives via programmable mesh shading. It is an alternative to the existing programmable primitive shading pipeline, which relied on generating input primitives by a fixed function assembler as well as fixed function vertex fetch.
There are new programmable shader types—the task and mesh shader—to generate these collections to be processed by fixed-function primitive assembly and rasterization logic. When task and mesh shaders are dispatched, they replace the core pre-rasterization stages, including vertex array attribute fetching, vertex shader processing, tessellation, and geometry shader processing.
Today's discovery shows that Intel's upcoming Arc Alchemist family of graphics cards based on DG2 GPU will not lag behind NVIDIA and AMD in terms of supported technical ecosystem. To learn more about mesh shader technology and some implementations, you can check out NVIDIA's developer blog here.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source