Microsoft Announces DirectX 12: Low Level Graphics Programming Comes To DirectX
by Ryan Smith on March 24, 2014 8:00 AM ESTWith GDC 2014 having drawn to a close, we have finally seen what is easily the most exciting piece of news for PC gamers. As previously teased by Microsoft, Microsoft took to the stage last week to announce the next iteration of DirectX: DirectX 12. And as hinted at by the session description, Microsoft’s session was all about bringing low level graphics programming to Direct3D.
As is often the case for these early announcements Microsoft has been careful on releasing too many technical details at once. But from their presentation and the smaller press releases put together by their GPU partners, we’ve been given our first glimpse at Microsoft’s plans for low level programming in Direct3D.
Preface: Why Low Level Programming?
The subject of low level graphics programming has become a very hot topic very quickly in the PC graphics industry. In the last 6 months we’ve gone from low level programming being a backburner subject, to being a major public initiative for AMD, to now being a major initiative for the PC gaming industry as a whole through Direct3D 12. The sudden surge in interest and development isn’t a mistake – this is a subject that has been brewing for years – but it’s within the last couple of years that all of the pieces have finally come together.
But why are we seeing so much interest in low level graphics programming on the PC? The short answer is performance, and more specifically what can be gained from returning to it.
Something worth pointing out right away is that low level programming is not new or even all that uncommon. Most high performance console games are written in such a manner, thanks to the fact that consoles are fixed platforms and therefore easily allow this style of programming to be used. By working with hardware at such a low level programmers are able to tease out a great deal of performance of this hardware, which is why console games look and perform as well as they do given the consoles’ underpowered specifications relative to the PC hardware from which they’re derived.
However with PCs the same cannot be said. PCs, being a flexible platform, have long worked off of high level APIs such as Direct3D and OpenGL. Through the powerful abstraction provided by these high level APIs, PCs have been able to support a wide variety of hardware and over a much longer span of time. With low level PC graphics programming having essentially died with DOS and vendor specific APIs, PCs have traded some performance for the convenience and flexibility that abstraction offers.
The nature of that performance tradeoff has shifted over the years though, requiring that it be reevaluated. As we’ve covered in great detail in our look at AMD’s Mantle, these tradeoffs were established at a time when CPUs and GPUs were growing in performance by leaps and bounds year after year. But in the last decade or so that has changed – CPUs are no longer rapidly increasing in performance, especially in the case of single-threaded performance. CPU clockspeeds have reached a point where higher clockspeeds are increasingly power-expensive, and the “low hanging fruit” for improving CPU IPC has long been exhausted. Meanwhile GPUs have roughly continued their incredible pace of growth, owing to the embarrassingly parallel nature of graphics rendering.
The result is that when looking at single threaded CPU performance, GPUs have greatly outstripped CPU performance growth. This in and of itself isn’t necessarily a problem, but it does present a problem when coupled with the high level APIs used for PC graphics. The bulk of the work these APIs do in preparing data for GPUs is single threaded by its very nature, causing the slowdown in CPU performance increases to create a bottleneck. As a result of this gap and its ever-increasing nature, the potential for bottlenecking has similarly increased; the price of abstraction is the CPU performance required to provide it.
Low level programming in contrast is more resistant against this type of bottlenecking. There is still the need for a “master” thread and hence the possibility of bottlenecking on that master, but low level programming styles have no need for a CPU-intensive API and runtime to prepare data for GPUs. This makes it much easier to farm out work to multiple CPU cores, protecting against this bottlenecking. To use consoles as an example once again, this is why they are capable of so much with such a (relatively) weak CPU, as they’re better able to utilize their multiple CPU cores than a high level programmed PC can.
The end result of this situation is that it has become time to seriously reevaluate the place of low level graphics programming in the PC space. Game developers and GPU vendors alike want better performance. Meanwhile, though it’s a bit cynical, there’s a very real threat posed by the latest crop of consoles, putting PC gaming in a tight spot where it needs to adapt to keep pace with the consoles. PCs still hold a massive lead in single-threaded CPU performance, but given the limits we’ve discussed earlier, too much bottlenecking can lead to the PC being the slower platform despite the significant hardware advantage. A PC platform that can process fewer draw calls than a $400 game console is a poor outcome for the industry as a whole.
105 Comments
View All Comments
nathanddrews - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link
...and in traffic modeling the faster roadway has more vehicles pass through it per hour: more bandwidth. GDDR5 over DDR3 is a significant advantage.inighthawki - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link
Yes exactly, and the speed (performance) of the highway (GPU) is not related to the architecture (feature set) which was being discussed. DDR3 vs GDDR5 is completely irrelevant to GCN 1.0 vs GCN 1.1.ninjaquick - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link
Actually, the GPU in X1 is not GCN1.1. The only benefits from 1.1 is the TrueAudio path (and XDMA, which X1 would not uses anyways), which is not present in the X1.Microsoft would have wanted to beat Sony out with development hardware, which mean waiting for emulated GCN1.1 or actual GCN1.1 hardware would have been too long a wait. I would guess one of the reasons developers are only given full access to 5 of the 8 cores on the X1 is because at least one of the reserved cores is dedicated for the audio driver.
tuxfool - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link
Isn't the ratio of ACE queues to CUs part of the difference between GCN1.1 and 1.0?ninjaquick - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link
I don't think so. There are differences in both generations, from top to bottom, in such regards. A product of scaling GCN up and down I presume.evolucion8 - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link
AFAIK, Xbox One is based on GCN1.1 and PS4 is based on the GCN 1.0Anders CT - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link
Will Direct12 be available on Windows 7?If not, we are talking about an API that will only be available on Xbox One, Surface 3 and 10% of desktop PC's, while OpenGL will be available on PS4, mac, Android, iOS, Steam,and Windows 7+8.
As for mobile, I just don't see how they can make a cross-platform command-list interface that includes both immediate and tiled renderers.
Flunk - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link
I imagine it will be available on Windows 9 and possibly Windows 8. By the time this comes out Windows 7 will be 2 versions out of date so I don't expect we'll see DirectX 12 support.jabber - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link
Plus this is another 18 months down the line. So Windows 7 will be nearly 6 years old by then.anandreader106 - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link
The vast majority of PC gamers use Windows 7. Unless Windows 9 fixes metro (seriously, it hasn't been fixed yet?) and there's a huge migration to it, Direct3D 12 adoption might be slower than previous versions.