**This is an old revision of the document!**

Component: GPU

This is the component provided by graphics cards. For simple programs the term API will usually all you need. For more complex operations, or to get a bit more performance, you may wish to interact with the GPU directly, though.

As of OC 1.3 screens of tier 2 and 3 have a 16 color palette. The palette is used to determine the exact colors used when displaying an RGB color.

For tier two this palette contains all colors the screen can possibly display, and is initialized to the standard Minecraft colors. As a side-effect you can specify the colors using gpu.setBackground(colors.red, true), for example. Keep in mind this only works on tier two screens. Tier three also has an editable 16 color palette, and also a 240 color fixed palette. The editable palette is initialized to grayscale values. The remaining 240 colors are stored as truncated RGB values as was the case in older versions of OpenComputers.

Component name: gpu.
Callbacks:

  • Video Ram Buffers This list of component api is getting long, so the new video ram api is listed below on this page in its own section
    • New in OC 1.7.5 Developer builds and expected in the next release (1.8)
  • bind(address: string[, reset: boolean=true]): boolean[, string]
    Tries to bind the GPU to a screen with the specified address. Returns true on success, false and an error message on failure. Resets the screen's settings if reset is 'true'. A GPU can only be bound to one screen at a time. All operations on it will work on the bound screen. If you wish to control multiple screens at once, you'll need to put more than one graphics card into your computer.
  • getScreen():string
    Get the address of the screen the GPU is bound to. Since 1.3.2.
  • getBackground(): number, boolean
    Gets the current background color. This background color is applied to all “pixels” that get changed by other operations.
    Note that the returned number is either an RGB value in hexadecimal format, i.e. 0xRRGGBB, or a palette index. The second returned value indicates which of the two it is (true for palette color, false for RGB value).
  • setBackground(color: number[, isPaletteIndex: boolean]): number[, index]
    Sets the background color to apply to “pixels” modified by other operations from now on. The returned value is the old background color, as the actual value it was set to (i.e. not compressed to the color space currently set). The first value is the previous color as an RGB value. If the color was from the palette, the second value will be the index in the palette. Otherwise it will be nil. Note that the color is expected to be specified in hexadecimal RGB format, i.e. 0xRRGGBB. This is to allow uniform color operations regardless of the color depth supported by the screen and GPU.
  • getForeground(): number, boolean
    Like getBackground, but for the foreground color.
  • setForeground(color: number[, isPaletteIndex: boolean]): number[, index]
    Like setBackground, but for the foreground color.
  • getPaletteColor(index: number): number
    Gets the RGB value of the color in the palette at the specified index.
  • setPaletteColor(index: number, value: number): number
    Sets the RGB value of the color in the palette at the specified index.
  • maxDepth(): number
    Gets the maximum supported color depth supported by the GPU and the screen it is bound to (minimum of the two).
  • getDepth(): number
    The currently set color depth of the GPU/screen, in bits. Can be 1, 4 or 8.
  • setDepth(bit: number): boolean
    Sets the color depth to use. Can be up to the maximum supported color depth. If a larger or invalid value is provided it will throw an error. Returns true if the depth was set, false otherwise.
  • maxResolution(): number, number
    Gets the maximum resolution supported by the GPU and the screen it is bound to (minimum of the two).
  • getResolution(): number, number
    Gets the currently set resolution.
  • setResolution(width: number, height: number): boolean
    Sets the specified resolution. Can be up to the maximum supported resolution. If a larger or invalid resolution is provided it will throw an error. Returns true if the resolution was changed (may return false if an attempt was made to set it to the same value it was set before), false otherwise.
  • getViewport(): number, number
    Get the current viewport resolution.
  • setViewport(width: number, height: number): boolean
    Set the current viewport resolution. Returns true if it was changed (may return false if an attempt was made to set it to the same value it was set before), false otherwise. This makes it look like screen resolution is lower, but the actual resolution stays the same. Characters outside top-left corner of specified size are just hidden, and are intended for rendering or storing things off-screen and copying them to the visible area when needed. Changing resolution will change viewport to whole screen.
  • getSize(): number, number
    Gets the size in blocks of the screen the graphics card is bound to. For simple screens and robots this will be one by one.
    Deprecated, use screen.getAspectRatio() instead.
  • get(x: number, y: number): string, number, number, number or nil, number or nil
    Gets the character currently being displayed at the specified coordinates. The second and third returned values are the fore- and background color, as hexvalues. If the colors are from the palette, the fourth and fifth values specify the palette index of the color, otherwise they are nil.
  • set(x: number, y: number, value: string[, vertical:boolean]): boolean
    Writes a string to the screen, starting at the specified coordinates. The string will be copied to the screen's buffer directly, in a single row. This means even if the specified string contains line breaks, these will just be printed as special characters, the string will not be displayed over multiple lines. Returns true if the string was set to the buffer, false otherwise.
    The optional fourth argument makes the specified text get printed vertically instead, if true.
  • copy(x: number, y: number, width: number, height: number, tx: number, ty: number): boolean
    Copies a portion of the screens buffer to another location. The source rectangle is specified by the x, y, width and height parameters. The target rectangle is defined by x + tx, y + ty, width and height. Returns true on success, false otherwise.
  • fill(x: number, y: number, width: number, height: number, char: string): boolean
    Fills a rectangle in the screen buffer with the specified character. The target rectangle is specified by the x and y coordinates and the rectangle's width and height. The fill character char must be a string of length one, i.e. a single character. Returns true on success, false otherwise.
    Note that filling screens with spaces ( ) is usually less expensive, i.e. consumes less energy, because it is considered a “clear” operation (see config).

Example use:

snippet.lua
local component = require("component")
local gpu = component.gpu -- get primary gpu component
local w, h = gpu.getResolution()
gpu.fill(1, 1, w, h, " ") -- clears the screen
gpu.setForeground(0x000000)
gpu.setBackground(0xFFFFFF)
gpu.fill(1, 1, w/2, h/2, "X") -- fill top left quarter of screen
gpu.copy(1, 1, w/2, h/2, w/2, h/2) -- copy top left quarter of screen to lower right

GPU Color Depth

Color Depth (see gpu.setDepth and gpu.getDepth) can be 1, 4, or 8 bits separately for foreground and background. These depths provide 2, 16, and 256 colors respectively.

The color value (the number passed to gpu.setBackground and gpu.setForeground) is interpreted either as a 8 bits per channel rgb value (24 bit color) or a palette index.

RGB Color

The background and foreground colors, as set by calling setBackground and setForeground, are defined by a value (number) and is_palette (boolean) pair (the boolean being optional).

When is_palette is false (or nil), value is interpreted as a 24 bit rgb color (0xRRGGBB), regardless of depth. However, the color is approximated to the closest available color in the given depth. In monochrome, zero rounds to zero and all nonzero values round to 1 (and the configured monochrome color is used). In 4 bit color, the closest available color in the palette is selected. In 8 bit color the closest color of the available 256 colors is used. The available 256 colors are described in the following table:

Image by Eunomiac

Palette Color

When is_palette is true, value is interpreted as palette index [0, 16). If you switch from a higher bit density to monochrome note that the color value from the palette is used to determine zero vs the nonzero monochrome color. It is an error to specify a paletted color (i.e. an index value and true) in 1 bit depth.

Changing Depth

Note that the original color pair (the value number and palette bool) are preserved (background and foreground each) even when switching bit depths. The actual rendering on the screen will update to respect the new depth, but the original 24bit rgb value (or palette index) is not lost. For example, calling gpu.getBackground while in 1 bit mode will return the original 24 bit rgb value specified from any previous color depth.

Video Ram Buffers

A GPU card has internal memory that you can allocate into pages. You can specify a custom page size (width and height each must be greater than zero). The total memory of a GPU is reduced by the width*height of an allocation. Each tier of gpu has more total memory than the last. Each page buffer acts like an offscreen Screen with its own width, height, and color. The max color depth of a gpu buffer is based on the gpu tier. Rebooting a machine releases all bufffers.

Each page buffer has its own index; the gpu finds the next available index. Index zero (0) has a special meaning, it is reserved for the screen. Whether a gpu is bound to a screen or not, you can allocate pages, set them active, and read/write to them. Attaching and detaching a screen, even binding to a new screen, does not release the gpu pages. When a computer shuts off or reboots, the pages are released. Each GPU has its own video memory and pages.

Budget and Energy Costs

Updates to vram (set, copy, fill, etc) are nearly free. They have no energy cost and no additional budget cost. Every direct component invoke (and these gpu methods are direct) has a tiny system minimum budget cost, but the gpu itself in these vram updates adds no additional cost. When bitblt'ing the vram to the screen there is some cost, similar to how updates to the screen normally incur a cost. A dirty (modified) vram back buffer has a one time budget cost that increases with the size of the source buffer. Subsequent bitblts from a clean back buffer to the screen have extremely low costs.

  • getActiveBuffer(): number
    Returns the index of the currently selected buffer. 0 is reserved for the screen, and may return 0 even when there is no screen
  • setActiveBuffer(index: number): number
    Sets the active buffer to index. 0 is reserved for the screen and can be set even when there is no screen. Returns nil for an invalid index (0 is valid even with no screen)
  • buffers(): table
    Returns an array of all current page indexes (0 is not included in this list, that is reserved for the screen).
  • allocateBuffer([width: number, height: number]): number
    Allocates a new buffer with dimensions width*heigh (gpu max resolution by default). Returns the index of this new buffer or error when there is not enough video memory. A buffer can be allocated even when there is no screen bound to this gpu. Index 0 is always reserved for the screen and thus the lowest possible index of an allocated buffer is always 1.
  • freeBuffer([index: number]): boolean
    Removes buffer at index (default: current buffer index). Returns true if the buffer was removed. When you remove the currently selected buffer, the gpu automatically switches back to index 0 (reserved for a screen)
  • freeAllBuffers()
    Removes all buffers, freeing all video memory. The buffer index is always 0 after this call.
  • totalMemory(): number
    Returns the total memory size of the gpu vram. This does not include the screen.
  • freeMemory(): number
    Returns the total free memory not allocated to buffers. This does not include the screen.
  • getBufferSize([index: number]): number, number
    Returns the buffer size at index (default: current buffer index). Returns the screen resolution for index 0. Returns nil for invalid indexes
  • bitblt([dst: number, col: number, row: number, width: number, height: number, src: number, fromCol: number, fromRow: number])
    Copy a region from buffer to buffer, screen to buffer, or buffer to screen. Defaults: