I'm trying to pass in attributes to my vertex shader but for some reason it keeps giving me a -1 on the 3rd attribute location I'm asking openGl to retrieve via glGetAttribLocation(). Currently it keeps giving me a -1 for the texCoord attribute and if I switch the texAttrib and colAttrib around (switching the lines in code) it gives me a -1 on the color property instead of the texture and I have no idea why? Since a -1 is being passed to glVertexAttribPointer I get the 1281 OpenGL error: GL_INVALID_VALUE.
My vertex shader:
#version 150
in vec3 position;
in vec3 color;
in vec2 texcoord;
out vec3 Color;
out vec2 Texcoord;
void main()
{
Color = color;
Texcoord = texcoord;
gl_Position = vec4(position.x, position.y, position.z, 1.0);
}
OpenGL code:
basicShader.Use();
// Buffers and shaders
glGenVertexArrays(1, &vao);
glBindVertexArray(vao);
glGenBuffers(1, &vbo);
// Make it active vbo
glBindBuffer(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, vbo);
// Build basic triangle
float vertices[] = {
// position // color // textures
-0.5f, 0.5f, 0.5f, 1.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 0.0f, // Top-left
0.5f, 0.5f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f, // Top-right
0.5f, -0.5f, 0.5f, 0.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, // Bottom-right
-0.5f, -0.5f, 0.5f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 1.0f, 0.0f, 1.0f// Bottom-left
};
GLuint elements[] = {
0, 1, 2,
2, 3, 0
};
glBufferData(GL_ARRAY_BUFFER, sizeof(vertices), vertices, GL_STATIC_DRAW);
GLint posAttrib = glGetAttribLocation(basicShader.shaderProgram, "position");
glEnableVertexAttribArray(posAttrib); // Enable attribute first before specifiying attributes
glVertexAttribPointer(posAttrib, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 8 * sizeof(float), 0); // 6 float sizes is every new vertex
GLint colAttrib = glGetAttribLocation(basicShader.shaderProgram, "color");
glEnableVertexAttribArray(colAttrib);
glVertexAttribPointer(colAttrib, 3, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 8 * sizeof(float), (void*)(3 * sizeof(float))); // same for color + offset
GLint texAttrib = glGetAttribLocation(basicShader.shaderProgram, "texcoord"); // Returns -1
glEnableVertexAttribArray(texAttrib);
glVertexAttribPointer(texAttrib, 2, GL_FLOAT, GL_FALSE, 8 * sizeof(float), (void*)(6 * sizeof(float))); // 6 offset from beginning
[..]
You should stop using
glGetAttribLocation
. Assign each attribute a location, either withglBindAttribLocation
before linking the program or with explicit attribute locations, if that's available to you.That way, if the compiler optimizes an attribute away (which is what's happening here; your fragment shader probably doesn't use one of the interpolated values), you won't care. You'll set up your arrays as normal, using a standard convention for attribute indices. Plus, you won't have to keep asking what an attribute location is every time you want to render with a different program; you know what location it is because you assigned it.
If you can't/won't, then there's nothing you can do. The compiler will optimize away attributes if you're not actually using them. The only thing you can do is detect that it returns -1 and not set up the array for that attribute.