Maximizing WPF 3D Performance on Tier-2 Hardware

As people use the Windows Presentation Foundation to build more 3D controls and include 3D scenes in their applications, they've been asking questions about how to optimize performance. Several members of the WPF 3D team have provided a list of 3D classes and properties that have performance implications, along with recommendations for optimizing performance when you use them.

This post assumes an advanced understanding of the WPF 3D API. Users unfamiliar with the API should consult the WPF SDK before making use of these suggestions. The advice in this post only applies to “Tier-2” video hardware—roughly defined as hardware that supports pixel shader version 2.0 and vertex shader version 2.0. In the interest of brevity, this post makes some generalizations—your mileage may vary.

Performance Impact: High

Property

Recommendation

Brush

Brush speed (fastest to slowest):

SolidColorBrush

LinearGradientBrush

ImageBrush

DrawingBrush (cached)

VisualBrush (cached)

RadialGradientBrush

DrawingBrush (uncached)

VisualBrush (uncached)

Viewport3D.ClipToBounds

Set Viewport3D.ClipToBounds to false whenever you do not need to have WPF explicitly clip the content of a Viewport3D to the Viewport3D’s rectangle. WPF’s antialiased clipping can be very slow, and ClipToBounds is enabled (slow) by default on Viewport3D.

Viewport3D.IsHitTestVisible

Set Viewport3D.IsHitTestVisible to false whenever you do not need WPF to consider the content of a Viewport3D when performing mouse hit testing. Hit testing 3D content is done in software and can be very slow with large meshes, and IsHitTestVisible is enabled (slow) by default on Viewport3D.

GeometryModel3D

Only make different models when they require different Materials or Transforms. Otherwise try to coalesce many GeometryModel3D instances with the same Materials and Transforms into a few large GeometryModel3D and MeshGeometry3D instances.

MeshGeometry3D

Mesh animation—changing the individual vertices of a mesh on a per-frame basis—is not very efficient in WPF. To minimize the performance impact of change-notifications when each vertex is modified, detach the mesh from the visual tree before performing per-vertex modification. Once the mesh has been modified, reattach it to the visual tree. Also, try to minimize the size of meshes which will be animated in this way.

3D Antialiasing

To potentially increase rendering speed, disable multisampling on a Viewport3D by setting the attached property RenderOptions.EdgeMode to Aliased. By default, 3D antialiasing is disabled on Windows XP and enabled on Vista with 4 samples per pixel.

Text

Live text in a 3D scene (live because it’s in a DrawingBrush or VisualBrush) is often super slow. Try to use images of the text instead (via RenderTargetBitmap) unless the text will be changing.

TileBrush

If you absolutely must use a VisualBrush or a DrawingBrush in a 3D scene (since the brush’s content is not static), try caching the brush (setting the attached property RenderOptions.CachingHint to Cache). Set the min and max scale invalidation thresholds (with the attached properties CacheInvalidationThresholdMinimum and CacheInvalidationThresholdMaximum) so that the cached brushes won’t be regenerated too frequently (or ever) given your scene, while still maintaining your desired level of quality. By default, DrawingBrushes and VisualBrushes are not cached, meaning that every time something painted with the brush has to be re-rendered, the entire content of the brush must first be re-rendered to an intermediate surface.

BitmapEffect

BitmapEffects force all affected content to be rendered without hardware acceleration. For best performance, do not use BitmapEffects.

 

Performance Impact: Medium

Property

Recommendation

MeshGeometry3D

When a mesh is defined as abutting triangles with shared vertices and those vertices have the same position, normal, and texture coordinates, define each shared vertex only once and then define your triangles by index with MeshGeometry3D.TriangleIndices.

ImageBrush

Try to minimize WPF’s texture sizes when you have explicit control over the size (as when you’re using a RenderTargetBitmap and/or an ImageBrush). Note that lower resolution textures can decrease visual quality, so try to find the right balance between quality and performance.

Opacity

When rendering translucent 3D content (such as reflections), use the opacity properties on Brushes or Materials (via Brush.Opacity or Material.Color) instead of creating a separate translucent Viewport3D (with Viewport3D.Opacity < 1).

Viewport3D

Minimize the number of Viewport3D objects you’re using in a scene. Put many 3D models in the same Viewport3D rather than creating separate Viewport3D instances for each model.

Freezable

Typically it’s beneficial to reuse MeshGeometry3D, GeometryModel3D, Brushes, and Materials. All are multiparentable since they’re derived from Freezable.

Freezable

Call the Freeze method on Freezables when their properties will remain unchanged in your application. Freezing can decrease working set and increase speed.

Brush

Use ImageBrushes instead of VisualBrush or DrawingBrush when the content of the brush will not change. 2D content can be converted to an Image via RenderTargetBitmap and then used in an ImageBrush.

BackMaterial

Don’t use GeometryModel3D.BackMaterial unless you actually have a use for seeing the back faces of your GeometryModel3D.

Light

Light speed (fastest to slowest):

Ambient

Directional

Point

Spot

MeshGeometry3D

Try to keep mesh sizes under these limits:

MeshGeometry3D.Positions: 20,001 Point3D instances

MeshGeometry3D.TriangleIndices: 60,003 Int32 instances

Material

Material speed (fastest to slowest):

EmissiveMaterial

DiffuseMaterial

SpecularMaterial

Brush

WPF 3D doesn't opt out of invisible brushes (black ambient brushes, clear brushes, etc…) in a consistent way. Don’t put these in your scene.

MaterialGroup

Each Material in a MaterialGroup causes another rendering pass, so many including materials, even simple materials, can dramatically increase the fill demands on your GPU. Minimize the number of materials in your MaterialGroup.

 

Performance Impact: Low

Property

Recommendation

Transform3DGroup

When you don’t need animation or databinding, instead of using a transform group containing multiple transforms, use a single MatrixTransform3D, setting it to be the product of all the transforms that would otherwise exist independently in the transform group.

Light

Minimize the number of lights in your scene. Too many lights in a scene will force WPF to fall back to software rendering. The limits are roughly ~110 DirectionalLights, ~70 PointLights, or ~40 SpotLights.

ModelVisual3D

Separate moving objects from static objects by putting them in separate ModelVisual3D instances. ModelVisual3D is "heavier" than GeometryModel3D because it caches transformed bounds. GeometryModel3Ds are optimized to be models. ModelVisual3Ds are optimized to be scene nodes. You want to use ModelVisual3Ds to put instances of (hopefully shared) GeometryModel3Ds into the scene.

Light

Minimize the number of times you change the number of lights in the scene. Each change of light count forces a shader regeneration and recompilation unless that configuration has already existed previously (and thus had its shader cached).

Light

Black lights won’t be visible, but they will still add to render time, so don’t use them.

MeshGeometry3D

To minimize the construction time of large collections in WPF, such as a MeshGeometry3D’s Positions, Normals, TextureCoordinates, and TriangleIndices, pre-size the collections before value population, and if possible, pass the the collections’ constructors pre-populated data structures such as arrays or Lists.

 

By David Teitlebaum, with contributions from Chris Raubacher, Anthony Hodsdon, Jordan Parker, and Daniel Lehenbauer.

 

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