This application is related to, and incorporates by reference, the following commonly assigned U.S. patent applications:
A METHOD FOR RASTERIZING NON-RECTANGULAR TILE GROUPS IN A RASTER STAGE OF A GRAPHICS PIPELINE, by Justin Legakis et al., filed on Jun. 23, 2006, Ser. No. 11/474,161;
A GPU HAVING RASTER COMPONENTS CONFIGURED FOR USING NESTED BOUSTROPHEDONIC PATTERNS TO TRAVERSE SCREEN AREAS” by Franklin C. Crow et al., Ser. No. 11/304,904, filed on Dec. 15, 2005; and A SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INCREASING DIE YIELD” by John Montrym et al., filed on Dec. 18, 2003, Ser. No. 10/740,723.
The present invention is generally related to hardware accelerated graphics computer systems.
Recent advances in computer performance have enabled graphic systems to provide more realistic graphical images using personal computers, home video game computers, handheld devices, and the like. In such graphic systems, a number of procedures are executed to “render” or draw graphic primitives to the screen of the system. A “graphic primitive” is a basic component of a graphic picture, such as a point, line, polygon, or the like. Rendered images are formed with combinations of these graphic primitives. Many procedures may be utilized to perform 3-D graphics rendering.
Specialized graphics processing units (e.g., GPUs, etc.) have been developed to optimize the computations required in executing the graphics rendering procedures. The GPUs are configured for high-speed operation and typically incorporate one or more rendering pipelines. Each pipeline includes a number of hardware-based functional units that are optimized for high-speed execution of graphics instructions/data, where the instructions/data are fed into the front end of the pipeline and the computed results emerge at the back end of the pipeline. The hardware-based functional units, cache memories, firmware, and the like, of the GPU are optimized to operate on the low-level graphics primitives (e.g., comprising “points”, “lines”, “triangles”, etc.) and produce real-time rendered 3-D images.
The real-time rendered 3-D images are generated using raster display technology. Raster display technology is widely used in computer graphics systems, and generally refers to the mechanism by which the grid of multiple pixels comprising an image are influenced by the graphics primitives. For each primitive, a typical rasterization system generally steps from pixel to pixel and determines whether or not to “render,” or write a given pixel into a frame buffer or pixel map, as per the contribution of the primitive. This, in turn, determines how to write the data to the display buffer representing each pixel.
Various traversal algorithms and various rasterization methods have been developed for computing from a graphics primitive based description to a pixel based description (e.g., rasterizing pixel to pixel per primitive) in a way such that all pixels within the primitives comprising a given 3-D scene are covered. For example, some solutions involve generating the pixels in a unidirectional manner. Such traditional unidirectional solutions involve generating the pixels row-by-row in a constant direction. This requires that the sequence shift across the primitive to a starting location on a first side of the primitive upon finishing at a location on an opposite side of the primitive.
Other traditional methods involve utilizing per pixel evaluation techniques to closely evaluate each of the pixels comprising a display and determine which pixels are covered by which primitives. The per pixel evaluation involves scanning across the pixels of a display to determine which pixels are touched/covered by the edges of a graphics primitive.
Once the primitives are rasterized into their constituent pixels, these pixels are then processed in pipeline stages subsequent to the rasterization stage where the rendering operations are performed. Generally, these rendering operations assign a color to each of the pixels of a display in accordance with the degree of coverage of the primitives comprising a scene. The per pixel color is also determined in accordance with texture map information that is assigned to the primitives, lighting information, and the like.
A problem exists however with the ability of prior art 3-D rendering architectures to scale to handle the increasingly complex 3-D scenes of today's applications. Computer screens now commonly have screen resolutions of 1920×1200 pixels or larger. Traditional methods of increasing 3-D rendering performance, such as, for example, increasing clock speed, have negative side effects such as increasing power consumption and increasing the heat produced by the GPU integrated circuit die. Other methods for increasing performance, such as incorporating large numbers of parallel execution units for parallel execution of GPU operations have negative side effects such as increasing integrated circuit die size, decreasing yield of the GPU manufacturing process, increasing power requirements, and the like.
Thus, a need exists for a rasterization process that can scale as graphics application needs require and provide added performance without incurring penalties such as increased power consumption and/or reduced fabrication yield.
Embodiments of the present invention provide a method and system for a rasterization process that can scale as graphics application needs require and provide added performance without incurring penalties such as increased power consumption and/or reduced fabrication yield.
In one embodiment, the present invention is implemented as a method for parallel fine rasterization in a raster stage of a graphics processor. The method includes receiving a graphics primitive (e.g., a triangle polygon) for rasterization in a raster stage of the graphics processor. The graphics primitive is rasterized at a first level to generate a plurality of tiles of pixels. The first level rasterization can be implemented using a coarse raster unit within the raster stage. The titles are subsequently rasterized at a second level by allocating the tiles to an array of parallel second-level rasterization units to generate covered pixels. The second-level rasterization can be implemented using an array of parallel fine raster units. The resulting covered pixels produced by the second-level rasterization are then output for rendering operations in a subsequent stage of the graphics processor.
In one embodiment, the use of large tiles by the coarse raster unit allows the first level rasterization to be implemented on a per clock cycle basis. Similarly, the use of multiple parallel fine raster units allow the rasterization at the second-level to be implemented in parallel on a per clock cycle basis. This aspect can greatly improve the scalability and the overall performance of the graphics rendering process.
In one embodiment, the plurality of fine raster units are substantially identical. The plurality of tiles can be allocated to the array of fine raster units to balance a workload among the fine raster units. Additionally, in one embodiment the use of multiple parallel fine raster units can provide a redundant rasterization capability. This redundant rasterization attribute can enable a selective functional component activation/deactivation capability for the array. For example, one or more of the fine raster units can be deactivated if necessary (e.g., due to a fault condition, to achieve a target power consumption level, etc.).
The present invention is illustrated by way of example, and not by way of limitation, in the figures of the accompanying drawings and in which like reference numerals refer to similar elements.
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred embodiments of the present invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. While the invention will be described in conjunction with the preferred embodiments, it will be understood that they are not intended to limit the invention to these embodiments. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Furthermore, in the following detailed description of embodiments of the present invention, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it will be recognized by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, components, and circuits have not been described in detail as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the embodiments of the present invention.
Notation and Nomenclature:
Some portions of the detailed descriptions, which follow, are presented in terms of procedures, steps, logic blocks, processing, and other symbolic representations of operations on data bits within a computer memory. These descriptions and representations are the means used by those skilled in the data processing arts to most effectively convey the substance of their work to others skilled in the art. A procedure, computer executed step, logic block, process, etc., is here, and generally, conceived to be a self-consistent sequence of steps or instructions leading to a desired result. The steps are those requiring physical manipulations of physical quantities. Usually, though not necessarily, these quantities take the form of electrical or magnetic signals capable of being stored, transferred, combined, compared, and otherwise manipulated in a computer system. It has proven convenient at times, principally for reasons of common usage, to refer to these signals as bits, values, elements, symbols, characters, terms, numbers, or the like.
It should be borne in mind, however, that all of these and similar terms are to be associated with the appropriate physical quantities and are merely convenient labels applied to these quantities. Unless specifically stated otherwise as apparent from the following discussions, it is appreciated that throughout the present invention, discussions utilizing terms such as “processing” or “accessing” or “executing” or “storing” or “rendering” or the like, refer to the action and processes of a computer system (e.g., computer system 100 of
Computer System Platform:
It should be appreciated that the GPU 110 can be implemented as a discrete component, a discrete graphics card designed to couple to the computer system 100 via a connector (e.g., AGP slot, PCI-Express slot, etc.), a discrete integrated circuit die (e.g., mounted directly on a motherboard), or as an integrated GPU included within the integrated circuit die of a computer system chipset component (not shown). Additionally, a local graphics memory 114 can be included for the GPU 110 for high bandwidth graphics data storage.
Embodiments of the present invention implement a method and system for rasterizing arbitrary groups of tiles in a raster stage of a graphics pipeline. Generally, the non-rectangular tile groups are in configurations other than, for example, squares (e.g., 4×4, 8×8, 16×16 titles, etc.) or rectangles (e.g., 4×8, 8×16 titles, etc.). The method includes receiving a graphics primitive (e.g., triangle polygon) for rasterization in a raster stage of a graphics processor (e.g., GPU 110 of
In one embodiment, the graphics primitive is rasterized at a first level by generating a footprint comprising a set of pixels related to the graphics primitive (e.g., a tile group that covers the primitive). The graphics primitive is then rasterized at a second level by accessing the set of pixels (e.g., the tile group that covers the primitive) and determining covered pixels out of the set. For example, even though the tile group may cover the primitive, not all pixels comprising each tile may cover, or reside within, the graphics primitive. The result of this two level rasterization is pixels that cover, or reside within, the graphics primitive. The raster stage subsequently outputs the covered pixels for rendering operations in a subsequent stage of the graphics processor.
In one embodiment, as depicted in
Thus, as depicted in
Referring still to
Additional details regarding boustrophedonic pattern rasterization can be found in U.S. patent application “A GPU HAVING RASTER COMPONENTS CONFIGURED FOR USING NESTED BOUSTROPHEDONIC PATTERNS TO TRAVERSE SCREEN AREAS” by Franklin C. Crow et al., Ser. No. 11/304,904, filed on Dec. 15, 2005, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
It should be noted that although embodiments of the present invention are described in the context of boustrophedonic rasterization, other types of rasterization patterns can be used. For example, the algorithms and GPU stages described herein for rasterizing tile groups can be readily applied to traditional left-to-right, line-by-line rasterization patterns.
As described above, the line 321 shows a boustrophedonic pattern of traversal, where the raster unit visits all pixels on a 2D area of the triangle 301 by scanning along one axis as each pass moves farther along on the orthogonal axis. In the
As described above, in one embodiment, the first level rasterization generates a tile group, or footprint (e.g., footprint 401) comprising a set of pixels related to the graphics primitive (e.g., a tile group that covers the primitive). Generally, the first level rasterization is intended to quickly determine which pixels of the screen area relate to a given graphics primitive. Accordingly, relatively large groups of pixels (e.g., tiles) are examined at a time in order to quickly find those pixels that relate to the primitive. The process can be compared to a reconnaissance, whereby the coarse raster unit quickly scans a screen area and finds tile groups that cover the triangle 301. Thus the pixels that relate to the triangle 301 can be discovered much more quickly than the traditional prior art process which utilizes a single level of rasterization and examines much smaller numbers of pixels at a time, in a more fine-grained manner.
In the
The
It should be noted that different numbers of tiles can be implemented in the first level coarse rasterization process. For example, instead of four tiles per footprint, six, eight, or more tiles can be utilized. With such large footprints, the tiles can be combined in a variety of different shapes and in a variety of different patterns in order to best cover a given graphics primitive.
In this manner, the non-rectangular footprint (e.g., footprint 501) stamped out by the raster stage is dimensionally adjustable in accordance with a shape of the graphics primitive (e.g., triangle 301). For example, the non-rectangular footprint can be dimensionally adjusted (e.g., x number of tiles wide by y number of tiles long) to optimize a number of covered pixels comprising the footprint. This attribute is especially useful in those cases where the primitive being rendered is exceptionally long and narrow. Such long narrow triangles commonly arise in applications such as, for example, stencil shadow algorithms. For example, in a case where the triangle 301 is a very long narrow triangle, the number of pixels comprising each tile, and the number of tiles comprising the footprint, can be optimized in order to stamp out footprints having a high proportion of covered pixels. This is especially useful when rasterizing pixels near the point (e.g., point 302) of the triangle.
The second level rasterization, or fine rasterization, now stamps out the individual covered pixels of the footprint 501. The fine rasterization process examines the pixels comprising the footprint 501 and determines which of those pixels are covered by the triangle 301. This is shown in
In the present embodiment, the rasterizer unit 702 includes a coarse raster component 703 and a fine raster component 704. The coarse raster component 703 implements the non-rectangular tile group rasterization process as described above, as it rapidly searches a grid of tiles to identify tiles of interest (e.g., tiles that are covered by a primitive). Once the tile groups of interest are identified, the fine raster component 704 individually identifies the pixels that are covered by the primitive. Hence, in such an embodiment, the coarse raster component 703 rapidly searches a grid of pixels by using tiles, and the fine raster component 704 uses the information generated by the coarse raster component 703 and implements fine granularity rasterization by individually identifying pixels covered by the primitive. In both cases, both the coarse raster component 703 and the fine raster component 704 can utilize one or more boustrophedonic patterns during their rasterization.
Referring still to
In one embodiment, the hardware comprising the raster unit 702 is optimized for operations on a per clock basis. For example, to provide high throughput and thereby maintain high rendering frame rates, the coarse raster component 703 and the fine raster component 704 comprise hardware designed to implement the first level rasterization and the second level rasterization on a per-clock cycle basis. The rasterizer unit 702 can be implemented such that the first level rasterization is implemented in the coarse raster component 703 that “stamps out” tile groups (e.g., including nonsymmetric tile groups) covering a given primitive within a single clock cycle. Subsequently, the rasterization at the second level is implemented in the fine raster component 704 that stamps out the covered pixels of a tile group in a single clock cycle. Thus for example, hardware that can process 64 pixels per clock would use a 64 pixel footprint (e.g., four tiles of 16 pixels each) while hardware that can process 128 pixels per clock would use a 128 pixel footprint (e.g., eight tiles of 16 pixels each, four tiles of 32 pixels each, etc.). As described above, these tiles can be arranged in various different conglomerations (e.g., long skinny footprints, square footprints, rectangular footprints, diagonal footprints, “L” shaped footprints, and the like).
Parallel Fine Rasterization:
In the
For example, in an embodiment where the hardware of the raster unit 702 is optimized for high throughput on a per clock basis, the coarse raster component 703 stamps out tile groups comprising a number of tiles (e.g., four tiles, etc.), where each tile comprises a number of pixels (e.g., 32 pixels each, etc.), all on a per clock basis, as described above. These tile groups can be symmetric or nonsymmetric, in accordance with any particular rasterization mode or any particular primitive being rasterized. Subsequently, the tile groups are allocated to each of the plurality of fine raster units within the array 804. The parallel fine raster units are configured to perform the second level fine rasterization on the tiles received from the coarse raster unit 703. Depending upon the desired level of performance, the array 804 will vary in size and will have a smaller or larger number of the parallel fine raster units.
In one embodiment, the tiles can be allocated to the array 804 on a per fine raster unit basis (e.g., one tile per fine raster unit, or the like). Alternatively, portions of tiles (e.g., one quarter of a tile, half of a tile, or the like) can be allocated on a per rasterizer unit basis. In general, the rasterization work is preferably spread among the parallel fine raster units to balance the resulting work load evenly. Subsequently, the parallel fine raster units can stamp out the individual covered pixels of each tile and output the results on a per clock cycle basis.
Thus, for example, hardware that can process 128 pixels per clock would use a 128 pixel footprint (e.g., eight tiles of 16 pixels each). The coarse raster unit 703 would stamp out eight tiles per clock and allocate each of the resulting eight tiles to the eight fine raster units of the array 804. Each of the eight fine raster units will then stamp out the covered pixels of their respective allocated tile (e.g., up to the full 16 pixels).
In one embodiment, the plurality of fine raster units of the array 804 are each substantially identical to one another. This attribute enables the fine raster units to function in a symmetric multiprocessing execution manner, where the workload received from the coarse raster unit 703 can be allocated to any one of the fine raster units of the array 804 on a pro rated share basis. Additionally, this attribute also simplifies the workload balancing among the parallel fine raster units of the array 804. Groups of tiles, individual tiles, or sub portions of tiles can be allocated to each of the fine raster units such that the workload is balanced among them, and such that their outputs are completed at the same clock cycle.
In an alternative embodiment, the grid of blocks can be assigned such that each of the fine raster units is assigned a slice of the grid. For example, each of the eight fine raster units can be assigned a column of the grid in accordance with the number of each of the blocks across the top row of the grid. Each fine raster unit will then rasterize the blocks of its assigned column. A similar arrangement can be implement using rows instead of columns, whereby each fine raster unit will rasterize the blocks of its assigned row. In this manner, a number of different allocation patterns can be implemented to efficiently balance the load among the fine raster units comprising the array.
In the
The ability to deactivate one or more of the fine raster units of the array 804 enables the inclusion of one or more redundant fine raster units into the array 804 to provide redundant capability in case of failure. For example, an additional number of fine raster units can be included into the array 804 even though the use of those additional fine raster units, if activated, would provide a performance level greater than the targeted performance level. Similarly, an additional number of fine raster units can be included into the array 804 even though, if activated, the capabilities of the raster units cannot be fully utilized by the throughput provided by the coarse raster unit 703 (e.g., as in a case where the throughput of the coarse raster unit 703 is a bottleneck). Such redundant one or more fine raster units can be activated and utilized in those cases where one or more of the other fine raster units of the array 804 is defective. For example, if two fine raster units are defective and inoperable, two redundant fine raster units can be activated, thereby maintaining the targeted performance level of the overall raster unit 702.
Diagram 1200 shows a distribution component 119, functional component configuration controller 120, collection component 140 and functional components 131, 132, 133 and 134. Distribution component 119 is coupled to functional components 131, 132, 133 and 134, which are coupled to collection component 140. Functional component configuration controller 120 is coupled to distribution component 119, functional components 131, 132, 133 and 134, and collection component 140. In one embodiment, each of the functional components 131-134 are fine raster units of an array (e.g., array 804) as described above.
In the present
In the
The components of diagram 1200 also cooperatively operate to flexibly configure functional component operational characteristics (e.g., enable/disable a functional component, change clock speed, change operating voltage, etc.). For example, functional component configuration controller 120 can disable or enable one or more functional components and notify the distribution component 119 of the change in operating characteristics (e.g., which of the functional components is enabled, disabled, etc.). In this manner, the functional component configuration controller 120 controls adjustments in operational characteristics (e.g., disable/enable, etc.) of one or more of the functional components 131-134 and can provide information to distribution component 119 and collection component 140 regarding the adjustment.
Additional descriptions regarding selective functional component activation/deactivation and the flexible configuration of functional component operational characteristics, such as enabling/disabling a functional component, change clock speed, change operating voltage, and the like can be found in commonly assigned U.S. patent application “A SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR INCREASING DIE YIELD” by John Montrym et al., filed on Dec. 18, 2003, application Ser. No. 10/740,723, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.
The foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The embodiments were chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated. It is intended that the scope of the invention be defined by the claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20070296725 A1 | Dec 2007 | US |