Early Direct3D 12 Demos

Wrapping things up, while DirectX 12 is not scheduled for public release until the Holiday 2015 time period, Microsoft tells us that they’ve already been working on the API for a number of years now. So although the API is 18-20 months off from its public release, Microsoft already has a very early version up and running on partner NVIDIA’s hardware.

In their demos Microsoft showed off a couple of different programs. The first of which was Futuremark’s 3DMark 2011, which along with being a solid synthetic benchmark for heavy workloads, also offers the ability to easily be dissected to find bottlenecks and otherwise monitor the rendering process.


3DMark 2011 CPU Time: Direct3D 11 vs. Direct3D 12

As part of their presentation Microsoft showed off some CPU utilization data comparing the Direct3D 11 and Direct3D 12 versions of 3DMark, which succinctly summarize the CPU performance gains. By moving the benchmark to Direct3D 12, Microsoft and Futuremark were able to significantly reduce the single-threaded bottlenecking, distributing more of the User Mode Driver workload across multiple threads. Meanwhile the use of the Kernel Mode Driver and the CPU time it consumed were eliminated entirely, as was some time within the Windows kernel itself. Finally, the amount of time spent within Direct3D was again reduced.

This benchmark likely leans towards a best case outcome for the use of Direct3D 12, but importantly it does show all of the benefits of a low level API at once. Some of the CPU workload has been distributed to other threads, other aspects of the CPU workload have been eliminated entirely. Yet despite all of this there’s still a clear “master” thread, showcasing the fact that not even the use of a low level graphics API can result in the workload being perfectly distributed among CPU threads. So there will still be a potential single-threaded bottleneck even with Direct3D 12, however it will be greatly diminished compared to the kinds of bottlenecking that could occur before.

Moving on, Microsoft’s other demo was a game demo, showcasing Forza Motorsport 5 running on a PC. Developer Turn 10 had ported the game from Direct3D 11.X to Direct3D 12, allowing the game to easily be run on a PC. Powered by a GeForce GTX Titan Black, Microsoft tells us the demo is capable of sustaining 60fps.

First Thoughts

Wrapping things up, it’s probably best to start with a reminder that this is a beginning rather than an end. While Microsoft has finally publically announced DirectX 12, what we’ve seen thus far is the parts that they are ready to show off to the public at large, and not what they’re telling developers in private. So although we’ve seen some technical details about the graphics API, it’s very clear that we haven’t seen everything DirectX 12 will bring. Even a far as Direct3D is concerned, it’s a reasonable bet right now that Microsoft will have some additional functionality in the works – quite possibly functionality relating to next-generation GPUs – that will be revealed as the API is closer to completion.

But even without a complete picture, Microsoft has certainly released enough high level and low level information for us to get a good look at what they have planned; and based on what we’re seeing we have every reason to be excited. A lot of this is admittedly a rehash of we’ve said several months ago when Mantle was unveiled, but then again if Direct3D 12 and Mantle are as similar as some developers are hinting, then there may not be very many differences to discuss.

The potential for improved performance in PC graphics is clear, as are the potential benefits to multi-platform developers. A strong case has been laid out by AMD, and now Microsoft, NVIDIA, and Intel that we need a low level graphics API to better map to the capabilities of today’s GPUs and CPUs. Direct3D 12 in turn will be the common API needed to bring those benefits to everyone at once, as only a common API can do.

It’s important to be exceedingly clear that at least for the first phase the greatest benefits are on the CPU side and not the GPU side – something we’ve already seen in practice with Mantle – so the benefits in GPU-bound scenarios will not be as great at first. But in the long run this means changing how the GPU itself is fed work and how that work is processed, so through features such as descriptor heaps the door to improved GPU efficiency is at least left open. But since we are facing an increasing gap between GPU performance and single-threaded CPU performance, even just the CPU bottlenecking reductions alone can be worth it as developers look to push larger and larger batches.

Finally, while I feel it’s a bit too early to say anything definitive, I do want to close with the question of what this means for AMD’s Mantle. For low level PC graphics APIs Mantle will be the only game in town for the next 18-20 months; but after that, then what? If nothing else Mantle is an incredibly important public proving ground for the benefits of low level graphics APIs, so even if Direct3D 12 were to supplant Mantle, Mantle has done its job. But I’m nowhere close to declaring Mantle’s fate yet, as we only have a handful of details on Direct3D 12 and Mantle itself is still in beta. Does Mantle continue alongside Direct3D 12, an easy target for porting since the two APIs are (apparently) so similar? Does Mantle disappear entirely? Or does AMD take Mantle and make it an open API, setting it up against Direct3D 12 in a similar manner as OpenGL sits against Direct3D 11 today? I imagine AMD already has a plan in mind, but that will be a discussion for another day…

Game Development, Consoles, and Mobile Devices
Comments Locked

105 Comments

View All Comments

  • ninjaquick - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link

    I don't think you realize how much engineers like to tinker. They will use D3D12 and Mantle if they get the time, and will get them to the public whenever possible, so long as development is more fun than frustrating.
  • Scali - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link

    Well, aside from the 'tinkering' part, it's pretty much a given that D3D12 will become the standard at some point. Why not build that D3D12 now, rather than wait until D3D12 is as popular as D3D11? It will give you a competitive advantage.
    Same goes for Mantle, to a lesser extent. Having support is an advantage, but it is harder to justify the extra work, because it is AMD-only, and DX12 will probably make Mantle obsolete within 1.5 years.
  • Anders CT - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    @ninjaquick

    Well, then that is a problem. Why would a developer optimize a game using an API that excludes 80-90% of the installbase?
  • jabber - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link

    I think I remember reading the same comments when DX10 was announced.

    I don't think anyone died as a result. The world carried on.
  • ninjaquick - Tuesday, March 25, 2014 - link

    Because developers, contrary to popular belief, are people organizations, with real people working in them. Many engineers love to do what they do and welcome new challenges, and can easily pitch working on something new and exciting so long as they can properly list the risks and benefits.

    Why would anyone support stereoscopic 3D, even though the vast majority of the population doesn't use it? Because they can.
  • Homeles - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    Microsoft's previous API-locking was a software limitation (DX10 requires WDDM 1.0), rather than an arbitrary work of greed, so it mostly depends on whether or not Windows 7's WDDM 1.1 can support it. Of course, there's the support issue that A5 has highlighted as well.
  • lefty2 - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    Actually, OpenGL has had extensions that bring the benefits of DirectX 12, since about a year ago. That was covered in one of the GDC tech talks. The only catch is that these extensions are yet only fully implemented on Nvidia hardware... but still quite interesting
  • steven75 - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    I would like to know the answer to this as well. OpenGL sure seems more important these days.
  • boe - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    How many FPS was this getting on DX11? 60FPS on DX12 doesn't tell us much for all I know it was getting about 80FPS.

    Developer Turn 10 had ported the game from Direct3D 11.X to Direct3D 12, allowing the game to easily be run on a PC. Powered by a GeForce GTX Titan Black, Microsoft tells us the demo is capable of sustaining 60fps.
  • DesktopMan - Monday, March 24, 2014 - link

    Yeah knowing that the game runs at 60 when capped at 60 is not informative at all. It should run at 120fps+ on a Titan, compared to the Xbox One GPU.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now