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The Android app I'm developing needs to render a few large bitmaps that are being updated continuously every frame. For the past year I rendered them through SurfaceView and Canvas, but now with the huge screen size of the Galaxy Nexus, drawing a large bitmap is extremely slow.

I'm making attempts to swap the rendering to openGL, but I can't update the textures fast enough each frame. At the moment I'm using glTexSubImage2d() to copy the bitmap data into a texture every frame, but this is much too slow. I've searched around a bit and apparently glCopyTexSubImage is somewhat faster, but the Android implementation doesn't accept a data parameter.

Any suggestions how I might be able to render dynamic textures without lag?

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  • I found a source that claims calling texImage2d and then rendering in the same frame stalls the GPU, and recommends double buffering. However, I'm not really sure how double buffering would help. groups.google.com/group/android-developers/browse_thread/thread/…
    – Kleptine
    Dec 31, 2011 at 19:39
  • What kind of updates you're doing on Bitmaps? It can't be anything very big changes if you're able to update Bitmaps for every frame, right?
    – harism
    Dec 31, 2011 at 20:08
  • Im not trying to answer a question with a question but Im just currious.....are you calling your opengl using java or c/c++? Dec 31, 2011 at 21:39
  • Java, though the gl methods I'm using should just call the native methods.
    – Kleptine
    Dec 31, 2011 at 22:18
  • It's a photo editing app, so it can be anything from drawing a line diagonally across the screen, or blurring a portion, or cutting a selection out of a layer. The bitmap operations are quick. Problem is they have to be done on the bitmap objects as I use features of the Canvas object.
    – Kleptine
    Dec 31, 2011 at 22:20

1 Answer 1

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I'm not sure this answers your question, but the way I'm doing it is I have a framebuffer allocated in C/C++ and pass this to java via ByteBuffer (jni->NewDirectByteBuffer()). I'm using this as a texture and it works fast and fine. Then, I can modify this framebuffer directly in C/C++ and the changes are visible immedialty after render is performed on the OpenGL sufrace. I'm currently having problems with ICS Galaxy Nexus, as it does not apply the texture correctly if the texture exceeds 2048x2048 pixels. I'm assuming the error is related to hardware constrains of the device, but I am still doing some testing.

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  • This sounds extremely interesting. I will look into it. Do you have more information on how you got it working? (For instance how you can use a bytebuffer as an openGL texture) Thanks!
    – Kleptine
    Feb 14, 2012 at 18:47
  • OpenGL methods take ByteBuffer (or CharBuffer) as a parameter. For instance, gl.glTexSubImage2D(GL10.GL_TEXTURE_2D, 0, 0, 0, textureWidth, textureHeight, GL10.GL_RGBA, GL10.GL_UNSIGNED_BYTE, charBuffer);. You can pass this buffer from C/C++ to Java via jni->NewDirectByteBuffer() method.
    – miha
    Feb 15, 2012 at 16:45

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