Creating skyboxes

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Revision as of 18:08, 24 August 2014 by Ingar (talk | contribs) (Import from backup)
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A skybox is a set of six seamless images which are rendered on the inside of a large cube surrounding the player, and is sometimes referred to as environment map. In first-person shooters they're uduslly images of far away hills, forest and buildings, in spacegames they will display stars, nebulas and far away galaxies.

Installing Spacescape

Alex Peterson's Spacescape is a tool for creating space skyboxes with stars and nebulas. A windows versions is readily available from its website, if you want to use it on linux you will have to compile it yourself.

Windows

Download the latest windows version. This is a ZIP file you have to unpack to a suitable location. You can use C:\Program Files (x86)\Spacescape or, if you have a 32bit system, C:\Program Files\Spacescape.

You should end up with a folder C:\Program Files (x86)\Spacescape containing Spacescape.exe and several subfolders. The Spacescape installation comes with a number of billboard star textures. Copy the flare textures for Project::OSiRiON to the folder C:\Program Files (x86)\Spacescape\media\materials\textures. You can also copy your own flare textures here.

Spacescape-flares.png

Linux

To build Spacescape on linux, you will need a working C++ compiler, cmake, the Qt library (4.8.x), the NVIDIA Cg libraries and the OGRE library.

Building

You need a subversion or git client to download the source code.

 svn co https://spacescape.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/spacescape/trunk spacescape
 cd spacescape

Apply a required patch to fix image size selection in the export file dialog.

 wget http://osirion.org/files/spacescape/spacescape-svn-r15-export_file_dialog.patch
 patch -Np0 -i spacescape-svn-r15-export_file_dialog.patch

Create a build directory, enter it and run cmake to create the Makefiles.

 mkdir build
 cd build
 cmake -D QtPropertyBrowser_Library_DBG:BOOL=0 ..

Build the binaries.

 make

On my system, the build fails with the following error:

 undefined reference to symbol '_ZN5boost6system15system_categoryEv'

To correct this error edit the following file inside the build/ directory:

 Spacescape/CMakeFiles/Spacescape.dir/link.txt

This file contains a single, long line. Find the part that looks like this:

 ../../Spacescape/app/linux/bin/Plugin_Spacescape.so -lOgreMain -lQtGui -lQtCore

Add -lboost_system in front of -lOgreMain

 ../../Spacescape/app/linux/bin/Plugin_Spacescape.so -lboost_system -lOgreMain -lQtGui -lQtCore

Run make again

 make

Leave the build/ directory, the resulting binary will be in Spacescape/app/linux/bin/ Copy the necessary libraries.

 cd ..
 cd Spacescape/app/linux/bin/
 cp -a ../../../external/QtPropertyBrowser/lib/libQtSolutions_PropertyBrowser-2.5.so* ./

Installing the OGRE Spacescape plugin

Part of spacescape is a plugin for the OGRE library. The file Plugin_Spacescape.so must be installed as root in the OGRE plugin directory.

 sudo install Plugin_Spacescape.so /usr/lib/OGRE/

Running

Run the program:

 LD_LIBRARY_PATH=./ ./Spacescape.bin

Installing media

You need to install the flare textures for For Project::OSiRiON. Copy the PNG images in sky/flares to the Spacescape media folder spacescape/Spacescape/media/materials/textures.

Spacescape Tutorial

Like many graphical design programs, Spacescape uses layers drawn on top of each other to create the final image. Each layer has its own set of settings which can be tweaked to achieve a pleasing result. Skyboxes are saved as XML files, you can load any of the Project::OSiRiON sky files as example.

The user interface of the application is reasonably simple: the left side of the screen contains a list of layers. Each layer can be expanded to show its settings. The right side of the screen is the preview window. You can rotate the skybox preview by dragging the image while holding the mouse button.

Spacescape-tutorial-00.png

In this tutorial we'll create a new skybox from scratch. Select File -> New from the menu.

Don't forget to consult the Spacescape manual for more information.

Point star layers

We start by creating a basic starfield. We'll add several star layers in different colors. Use the Add Layer button at the bottom to add a new layer. Expand the layer to edit its settings.

Layer Name 
Give the layer a descriptive name like point stars white.
Layer Type 
For point stars, the layer type should be points.
Layer Visible 
Disable this option to hide a layer, leave the layer visible.
Random Seed 
Changing the seed will alter the distribution of the stars, always change the seed for point star layers.
Dest Blend Factor 
Leave on one for point star layers, see Blending
Far Color 
The color of far away stars, leave it on black (0, 0, 0)

At this time, we won't use the Mask settings.

Near Color 
The color of nearby stars, set to white (255, 255, 255)
Number of Points 
Set to 10000.
Point Size 
Number of pixels used to draw the star, leave it on 1.
Source Blend Factor 
Leave on one for point star layers, see Blending

Use the Copy Layer button at the bottom to duplicate the layer two or three times. On each copy, change the Random Seed and the Near Color. You should end op with several layers of point stars in different colors.

You can improve the starfield by tweaking the colors even more. Expand the Far Color and set it to a non-black color. Set the alpha to 0. Enable alpha blending by setting the Source Blend Factor to src_alpha. This will a create a color gradient between far away and nearby stars, while blending far away stars into the dark background.

Spacescape-tutorial-01.png

Next, we create a a large version for each star layer. Duplicate each point star layer and change the Number of Points to 2500. Change the Point Size to 2. Don't forget to change the Random Seed too! You should end op with six to eight point star layers, with half of the layers having Point Size 2. The result should be a reasonably rich starfield with stars in multiple colors.

Spacescape-tutorial-02.png

Billboard star layers

Point star layers are a good base, but they remain simple dots on a black background. We'll introduce some variation by adding billboard star layers. Billboards are similar to points but use flare textures instead of dots. You can use any image in the folder C:\Program Files (x86)\Spacescape\media\materials\textures.

Create a new layer and call it billboard stars white, set the Layer Type to billboards. Most of the settings are the same as in point layers before: set the Random Seed, Near Color and Far Color. Next, apply the following settings:

Number of Points 
Set to 250.
Near Billboard Size 
Size of nearby stars, set to 0.012.
Far Billboard Size 
Size of far away stars, set to 0.005.
Billboard Texture 
Filename of the flare texture to use, you can leave the default or change it to osirion-flare-07.png or any other installed texture.

Like point star layers, copy the layer a few times, change the Layer Name, Random Seed, Far Color, Near Color and the Billboard Texture as desired. You should end up with around 3 layeres of billboard stars in different colors.

Spacescape-tutorial-03.png

All these layers combine into a base background starfield:

Spacescape-tutorial-03-preview.png

Background dust layers

So far, the starfield is rather uniform in appearance. We add a layer of background dust to create the impression of darker and lighter areas in the sky. Add a new layer and name it background dust. Set the Layer Type to noise and set a Random Seed. Leave the Inner Color and Outer Color on default for now. We want a black dust layer and if you set the color now it will be very hard to see the dust while manipulating its shape.

You can manipulate the shape with the following parameters, it takes some experimenting to get the result you want:

Lacunarity 
The cloudyness of the dust layer: low lacunarity will create more uniform dust, high lacunarity will give a more cloudy appearance. Set it to 4 for the background dust layer.
Octaves 
Setting this parameter higher will result in more fine-detailed dust. Set it to 4 for the background dust layer.
Power
A higher power setting will result in brighter colors.
Threshold
A cutoff value below which the dust will not be rendered. It creates a more cloud-like appearance but can introduce hard edges. Set it to 0.25 for the background dust layer.

Finally, set Dest Blend Factor to one_minus_src_alpha and Source Blend Factor to srC_alpha. Set both Inner Color and Outer Color to black (0, 0, 0). By toggling the Layer Visible setting you can easily see the difference with and without dust layer. We can tweak the result even further by trying to move backgorund dust layer and/or the billboard star layers around. If we move the billboard stars red layer above the background dust layer, the red stars will be unobstructed by the dust and give a more red impression to the sky in general.

Spacescape-tutorial-04.png

The result is a more tempered background starfield:

Spacescape-tutorial-04-preview.png

Foreground nebula layers

Nebula layer

With the background starfield completed, we can start adding nebulae. Add a new layer and set the Layer Name to nebula brown and set the Layer Type to noise. We'll set a color gradient and make it transparent by using conventional alpha blending:

Random Seed 
changing the random seed alters the shape of the nebula
Dest Blend Factor 
set to one_minus_src_alpha
Source Blend Factor 
set to src_alpha
Inner Color 
Select a dominant, bright color
Outer Color 
Select a darker shade ad set alpha to 0

Change the appearance;

Lacunarity 
Set to 2.5 or experiment
Octaves 
Set to 8 or experiment
Threshold 
Give it a low value in the 0.00 to 0.25 range

Spacescape-tutorial-05.png

Nebula highlights layer

To make the nebula more interesting, we add a highlights layer. Make a copy of the nebula brown layer: select its node in the layer tree structure and clicke the Copy Layer button at the buttom. Set the Layer Name of the copy to nebula highlights. The highlights layer should have the same parameters and random seed as the original.

Inner Color 
Set to a bright color, alpha to 255
Outer Color 
Set to a bright color, alpha to 255
Threshold 
Give it a higher value, around 0.5
Power 
Make the highlights more subtle by decreasing power
Gain 
Make the highlights sharper by increasing gain

Spacescape-tutorial-06.png

Spacescape-tutorial-06-preview.png

Nebula ridges layer

We improve the appearance of the nebula by adding a layer of dark ridges: add a new layer and set the Layer Name to nebula ridges, set the Layer Type to noise. Set the Noise Type to ridged.

Random Seed 
I used the same random seed as the nebula and nebula highlights layers, this isn't required here but happened to look good
Dest Blend Factor 
set to one_minus_src_alpha
Gain 
increase to 0.750
Inner Color 
set to black (0, 0, 0), set alpha to 255
Lacunarity 
set to 2.5
Octaves 
set to 8
Outer Color 
set to black (0, 0, 0), set alpha to 0
Power 
set to 0.250
Threshold 
set to 0.500
Source Blend Factor 
set to src_alpha

Spacescape-tutorial-07.png

The result is a far more realistic looking nebula:

Spacescape-tutorial-07-preview.png

Nebula streaks layer

We add the final touch by creating a nebula streaks layer. Set the Layer Type to noise and the Noise Type to ridged.

Random Seed 
don't forget to set the random seed
Inner Color 
pick an approriate streak color, I've chosen a somewhat darker red tint.
Lacunarity 
set to 3 to create a more sparse nebula
Octaves 
set to 6
Outer Color 
set to black (0, 0, 0), set alpha to 0
Power 
set to 0.25
Threshold 
set to 0.5

Spacescape-tutorial-08.png

Moving the nebula streaks layer below the nebula brown layer makes it blend better with the other nebula layers:

Spacescape-tutorial-08-preview.png

Blending

  • TODO: explain the blending modes.

These are standard OpenGL blending functions. See section 6.2.2 Explicit blend functions of the Quake 3 shader manual.

Exporting

To export the skybox to 6 environment map images, select the the Export Skybox option in the File menu. This will save the skybox as 6 PNG or JPG images.

Spacescape-tutorial-export.png

Select the desired resolution at the bottom. Use 2048 for Project::OSiRiON, use 1024 for Quake 3 based games. Tremulous and Unvanquished crash with skyboxes larger than 1024, Xonotic is reported to work with 2048 skyboxes.

For Project::OSiRiON, export to PNG and rename the images as follows:

tutorial_back6.png   -> tutorial_back.png
tutorial_bottom4.png -> tutorial_bottom.png
tutorial_front5.png  -> tutorial_front.png
tutorial_left2.png   -> tutorial_left.png
tutorial_right1.png  -> tutorial_right.png
tutorial_top3.png    -> tutorial_top.png

For Quake 3 compatible games, export to JPG or PNG. Rename the images as follows. Note that the right and left images are swapped.

tutorial_back6.png   -> tutorial_bk.png
tutorial_bottom4.png -> tutorial_dn.png
tutorial_front5.png  -> tutorial_ft.png
tutorial_left2.png   -> tutorial_rt.png
tutorial_right1.png  -> tutorial_lf.png
tutorial_top3.png    -> tutorial_up.png

Transform the images as follows:

  • Rotate the top/up image 90 degrees counter-clockwise
  • Rotate the bottom/down image 90 degrees clockwise

You might have to write a shader file:

textures/spacescape/tutorial
{
   qer_editorimage env/spacescape/tutorial_ft.png
   surfaceparm noimpact
   surfaceparm nolightmap
   surfaceparm sky 
   skyparms env/spacescape/tutorial - -
}

The images should be copied to the env/spacescape folder inside your game data folder.

Remarks

  • The settings in this tutorial are intended to export skyboxes to 2048x2048 image files. If you intend to export to a different resolution, you will have to alter the size and number of stars settings.

Discussion