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I have been having trouble finding straightforward code to render a scene to a texture in OpenGL ES (specifically for the iPhone, if that matters). I am interested in knowing the following:

  1. How do you render a scene to a texture in OpenGL ES?
  2. What parameters must you use to create a texture that is capable of being a render target in OpenGL ES?
  3. Are there any implications with applying this rendered texture to other primitives?
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This is how I'm doing it.

I define a texture variable (I use Apple's Texture2D class, but you can use an OpenGL texture id if you want), and a frame buffer:

Texture2d * texture;
GLuint textureFrameBuffer;

Then at some point, I create the texture, frame buffer and attach the renderbuffer. This you only need to do it once:

texture = [[Texture2D alloc] initWithData:0
    									   pixelFormat:kTexture2DPixelFormat_RGB888
    									   pixelsWide:32
    									   pixelsHigh:32
    									   contentSize:CGSizeMake(width, height)];

    // create framebuffer
glGenFramebuffersOES(1, &textureFrameBuffer);
glBindFramebufferOES(GL_FRAMEBUFFER_OES, textureFrameBuffer);

    // attach renderbuffer
glFramebufferTexture2DOES(GL_FRAMEBUFFER_OES, GL_COLOR_ATTACHMENT0_OES, GL_TEXTURE_2D, texture.name, 0);

// unbind frame buffer
glBindFramebufferOES(GL_FRAMEBUFFER_OES, 0);

Every time I want to render to the texture, I do:

glBindFramebufferOES(GL_FRAMEBUFFER_OES, textureFrameBuffer);

    ...
    // GL commands
    ...

glBindFramebufferOES(GL_FRAMEBUFFER_OES, 0);

About your question 3, that's it, you can use the texture as if it is any other texture.

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Marco, do you know how much overhead is involved in keeping a framebuffer and renderbuffer for each texture you need to render into? I have several large textures my app needs to draw into, and I'm currnetly attaching different ones to a single "extra" framebuffer using glFramebufferTexture2DOES. Would keeping a separate framebuffer for each be better? – Ben Gotow Jun 21 at 20:12

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