Another answer wrote, "D3DImage
only supports Direct3D9/Direct3D9Ex"... which is perhaps not entirely true for the last few years anyway. As I summarized in a comment here, the key appears to be that Direct3D11 with DXGI has a very specific interop compatibility mode (D3D11_SHARED_WITHOUT_MUTEX
flag) which makes the ID3D11Texture2D1
directly usable as a D3DResourceType.IDirect3DSurface9
, without copying any bits, which just so happens to be exactly (and only) what WPF D3DImage
is willing to accept.
This is a rough sketch of what worked for me, to create a D3D11 SampleAllocator that produces ID3D11Texture2D1
that are directly compatible with WPF's Direct3D9. Because all the .NET interop shown here is of my own design, this will not be totally ready-to-run code to drop in your project, but the method, intent, and procedures should be clear for easy adaptation.
1. preliminary helper
static D3D_FEATURE_LEVEL[] levels =
{
D3D_FEATURE_LEVEL._11_1,
D3D_FEATURE_LEVEL._11_0,
};
static IMFAttributes GetSampleAllocatorAttribs()
{
MF.CreateAttributes(out IMFAttributes attr, 6);
attr.SetUINT32(in MF_SA_D3D11_AWARE, 1U);
attr.SetUINT32(in MF_SA_D3D11_BINDFLAGS, (uint)D3D11_BIND.RENDER_TARGET);
attr.SetUINT32(in MF_SA_D3D11_USAGE, (uint)D3D11_USAGE.DEFAULT);
attr.SetUINT32(in MF_SA_D3D11_SHARED_WITHOUT_MUTEX, (uint)BOOL.TRUE);
attr.SetUINT32(in MF_SA_BUFFERS_PER_SAMPLE, 1U);
return attr;
}
static IMFMediaType GetMediaType()
{
MF.CreateMediaType(out IMFMediaType mt);
mt.SetUINT64(in MF_MT_FRAME_SIZE, new SIZEU(1920, 1080).ToSwap64());
mt.SetGUID(in MF_MT_MAJOR_TYPE, in WMMEDIATYPE.Video);
mt.SetUINT32(in MF_MT_INTERLACE_MODE, (uint)MFVideoInterlaceMode.Progressive);
mt.SetGUID(in MF_MT_SUBTYPE, in MF_VideoFormat.RGB32);
return mt;
}
2. the D3D11 device and context instances go somewhere
ID3D11Device4 m_d3D11_device;
ID3D11DeviceContext2 m_d3D11_context;
3. initialization code is next
void InitialSetup()
{
D3D11.CreateDevice(
null,
D3D_DRIVER_TYPE.HARDWARE,
IntPtr.Zero,
D3D11_CREATE_DEVICE.BGRA_SUPPORT,
levels,
levels.Length,
D3D11.SDK_VERSION,
out m_d3D11_device,
out D3D_FEATURE_LEVEL _,
out m_d3D11_context);
MF.CreateDXGIDeviceManager(out uint tok, out IMFDXGIDeviceManager m_dxgi);
m_dxgi.ResetDevice(m_d3D11_device, tok);
MF.CreateVideoSampleAllocatorEx(
ref REFGUID<IMFVideoSampleAllocatorEx>.GUID,
out IMFVideoSampleAllocatorEx sa);
sa.SetDirectXManager(m_dxgi);
sa.InitializeSampleAllocatorEx(
PrerollSampleSink.QueueMax,
PrerollSampleSink.QueueMax * 2,
GetSampleAllocatorAttribs(),
GetMediaType());
}
4. use sample allocator to repeatedly generate textures, as needed
ID3D11Texture2D1 CreateTexture2D(SIZEU sz)
{
var vp = new D3D11_VIEWPORT
{
TopLeftX = 0f,
TopLeftY = 0f,
Width = sz.Width,
Height = sz.Height,
MinDepth = 0f,
MaxDepth = 1f,
};
m_d3D11_context.RSSetViewports(1, ref vp);
var desc = new D3D11_TEXTURE2D_DESC1
{
SIZEU = sz,
MipLevels = 1,
ArraySize = 1,
Format = DXGI_FORMAT.B8G8R8X8_UNORM,
SampleDesc = new DXGI_SAMPLE_DESC { Count = 1, Quality = 0 },
Usage = D3D11_USAGE.DEFAULT,
BindFlags = D3D11_BIND.RENDER_TARGET | D3D11_BIND.SHADER_RESOURCE,
CPUAccessFlags = D3D11_CPU_ACCESS.NOT_REQUESTED,
MiscFlags = D3D11_RESOURCE_MISC.SHARED,
TextureLayout = D3D11_TEXTURE_LAYOUT.UNDEFINED,
};
m_d3D11_device.CreateTexture2D1(ref desc, IntPtr.Zero, out ID3D11Texture2D1 tex2D);
return tex2D;
}