Rasagar/Library/PackageCache/com.unity.render-pipelines.high-definition/Documentation~/Post-Processing-Depth-of-Field.md
2024-08-26 23:07:20 +03:00

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Depth Of Field

The Depth Of Field component applies a depth of field effect, which simulates the focus properties of a camera lens. In real life, a camera can only focus sharply on an object at a specific distance; objects nearer or farther from the camera are out of focus. The blurring gives a visual cue about an objects distance, and introduces Bokeh, which refers to visual artifacts that appear around bright areas of the image as they fall out of focus.

Using Depth Of Field

Depth Of Field uses the Volume framework, so to enable and modify Depth Of Field properties, you must add a Depth Of Field override to a Volume in your Scene. To add Depth Of Field to a Volume:

  1. In the Scene or Hierarchy view, select a GameObject that contains a Volume component to view it in the Inspector.
  2. In the Inspector, go to Add Override > Post-processing and select Depth Of Field. HDRP now applies Depth Of Field to any Camera this Volume affects.

Depth Of Field includes advanced properties. that you must manually expose.

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Properties

Property Description
Focus Mode Use the drop-down to select the mode that HDRP uses to set the focus for the depth of field effect.
Off: Select this option to disable depth of field.
Physical Camera: Select this option to use the physical Camera to set focusing properties for the depth of field effect. For information on what Camera properties affect depth of field, see Physical Camera settings.
Manual Ranges: Select this option to use custom values to set the near and far range of the depth of field effect.
Focus Distance Mode Use the drop-down to select where the focus distance is specified.
Volume: Reads the focus distance from the Volume.
Camera: Reads the focus distance from the physical camera.
This property only appears when you select Physical Camera from the Focus Mode drop-down.
Focus Distance Set the distance to the focus plane from the Camera.
This property only appears when you select Volume from the Distance Mode drop-down.

Near Blur

Property Description
Start Set the distance from the Camera at which the near field blur begins to decrease in intensity.
This property only appears when you select Manual from the Focus Mode drop-down.
End Set the distance from the Camera at which the near field doesn't blur anymore.
This property only appears when you select Manual from the Focus Mode drop-down.
Sample Count Set the number of samples to use for the near field. Lower values result in better performance at the cost of visual accuracy.
Max Radius Set the maximum radius the near blur can reach.

Far Blur

Property Description
Start Set the distance from the Camera at which the far field starts blurring.
This property only appears when you select Manual from the Focus Mode drop-down.
End Set the distance from the Camera at which the far field blur reaches its maximum blur radius.
This property only appears when you select Manual from the Focus Mode drop-down.
Sample Count Set the number of samples to use for the far field. Lower values result in better performance at the cost of visual accuracy.
Max Radius Set the maximum radius the far blur can reach.

Physical Camera settings

Here is a list of the physical Camera properties that affect the Depth of Field effect when you select Use Physical Camera from the Focus Mode drop-down.

Property Effect
Aperture The larger this value, the larger the bokeh and overall blur effect.
Blades Count This determines the shape of the bokeh. For more information on the effect this property has, see the example below.
Curvature Determines how much of the blades are visible. Use this to change the roundness of bokeh in the blur. For more information on the effect this property has, see the example below.

This example shows how the Blade Count and Curvature properties affect the shape of the bokeh:

  • On the left side, there is a five blade iris that's slightly open; producing a pentagonal bokeh.
  • On the right side, there is a five blade iris that's wide open; producing a circular bokeh.

Path-traced depth of field

If you enable path tracing and set Focus Mode to Use Physical Camera, HDRP computes depth of field directly during path tracing instead of as a post-processing effect.

Path-traced depth of field produces images without any artifacts, apart from noise when using insufficient path-tracing samples. To reduce the noise level, increase the number of samples from the Path Tracing settings or de-noise the final frame.

HDRP computes path-traced depth of field at full resolution and ignores any quality settings from the Volume.