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WebGL is known to have poor support for NPOT (non-power-of-two) textures. But what about rectangular textures where both width and height are powers of two? Specifically, I'm trying to draw to a rectangular framebuffer as part of a render-to-texture scheme to generate some UI elements. The framebuffer would need to be 512x64 or thereabouts.

How much less efficient would this be in terms of drawing? If framerate is a concern, would I do better to allocate a 512x512 power-of-two-sized buffer and only render to the top 64 pixels, sacrificing memory for speed?

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There has never been the constraint for that width must equal height.

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    To develop a little more on this answer: some Compressed texture extensions require that the textures be equal width and height (WebGL still doesn't support them), but that's not a restriction nor a performance hit to standard OpenGL/WebGL behavior. Oct 3, 2011 at 13:33
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More specifically: 2D textures are not at all required to be square; a 512x64 texture is not only allowed but should also be efficiently implemented by the driver; on the other hand cube maps need to be square.

For 2D textures, you can use NPOT textures if both wrap modes are CLAMP_TO_EDGE and your minification filter does not require a mipmap. Efficiency of NPOT texture may vary depending on your driver.

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