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R&D Bundler 3D Plugins

Bundler plugins for optimizing glTF 3D models (.gltf and .glb files).

Created by R&D @ The New York Times.

Overview

Monorepo containing plugins for two popular bundlers (Vite and Rollup) allowing each to process and optimize 3D models used by a web application. While bundlers can process traditional web content — like CSS or images — out of the box or with existing plugins, bundlers lack any understanding of 3D content. This project orchestrates processing of models using the glTF-Transform library, and includes configuration flexible enough to select among existing processing stages or to define and add new methods.

Dependencies:

  • glTF Transform: general-purpose glTF processing library
  • Draco: compression for mesh geometry
  • Meshoptimizer: compression for mesh geometry, point geometry, animation, and morph targets

Quickstart

1. Installation

Rollup:

npm install --save-dev rollup-plugin-gltf

Vite:

npm install --save-dev vite-plugin-gltf

2. Minimal Configuration

The plugin is unopinionated about which optimizations should be applied to your glTF models. Here is a minimal configuration that simply applies Draco compression of your assets:

// *.config.js
import gltf from "rollup-plugin-gltf"; // (a) Rollup
import gltf from "vite-plugin-gltf"; // (b) Vite

import { draco } from "@gltf-transform/functions";

return {
  // ...
  plugins: [
    gltf({
      transforms: [draco()],
    }),
  ],
};

See advanced configuration for more complex examples.

SvelteKit: it seems that in SvelteKit SSR should be disabled in order to avoid mysterious ReferenceError issues - see issues filed here and on the SvelteKit repo.

3. Asset Placement

Assets should be placed somewhere in the src directory, and imported as resolved URLs:

import sceneUrl from "./assets/scene.glb"; // full path: src/assets/scene.glb

SvelteKit: in a SvelteKit project, place your assets somewhere in src/lib. Then you can import the asset's post-build url like so:

<script>
  import sceneUrl from '$lib/assets/scene.glb';
</script>

4. Execution on Build

The plugin will optimize assets at build time. Vite has several modes, and optimization occurs in production (vite build) and preview (vite preview) but not development (vite) modes.

Advanced Configuration

Many optimizations are available off the shelf from @gltf-transform/functions. You can compose these to form your own optimization pipelines, for example:

// *.config.js
import gltf from "rollup-plugin-gltf"; // (a) Rollup
import gltf from "vite-plugin-gltf"; // (b) Vite

import { dedup, draco, prune, textureCompress } from "@gltf-transform/functions";
import sharp from 'sharp';

return {
  // ...
  plugins: [
    gltf({
      transforms: [
        // remove unused resources
        prune(),
        // combine duplicated resources
        dedup(),
        // optimize images, keep size under 2048x2048
        textureCompress({ encoder: sharp, resize: [2048, 2048] }),
        // compress mesh geometry
        draco(),
      ],
    }),
  ],
};

Other types of processing can be customized to the needs of your project. For example, the custom transform below converts double-sided materials to single-sided materials, helping to improve fillrate:

// *.config.js
import gltf from "rollup-plugin-gltf"; // (a) Rollup
import gltf from "vite-plugin-gltf"; // (b) Vite

const frontSide = (options) => {
  return async (document) => {
    for (const material of document.getRoot().listMaterials()) {
      material.setDoubleSided(false);
    }
  };
};

return {
  // ...
  plugins: [gltf({ transforms: [frontSide()] })],
};

Roadmap

We believe this is the first open source project bringing optimization of 3D scenes into the standard build tools used for web application development. As a result, the boundaries of the project's scope are likely to evolve. The Q&A below tries to address some likely questions about scope, but please feel free to open issues or discussions on GitHub with questions.

Will you support other bundlers?

Yes, but we need your help. We hope this project is structured to make extension to other web-related build tools possible. But we aren't currently working with other build tools ourselves, and would prefer that development for those tools be driven by users who are. If that's you, please file an issue or PR on GitHub!

Will you support <specific optimization>?

Yes, but requests for particular optimization features are best directed to the optimization tools we already use. We configure bundlers to process 3D assets with existing optimization tools. New optimizations will become available here as those tools evolve.

Will you support other optimization tools?

Maybe. We're using glTF-Transform because it's compatible with a JavaScript runtime, provides integrations with other optimization tools (Draco, Meshoptimizer, Sharp, Basis Universal), and is extensible enough to allow defining new processing stages easily. We'd encourage you to see if your requirements are possible within that framework, but would be glad to hear from you if not.

Will you support optimizing other file formats?

Maybe. Many file formats do not support the types of optimizations that motivate the creation of this project, and we consider such formats out of scope. glTF offers significant advantages as a last-mile format for runtime delivery. Other 3D formats like 3D Tiles or USDZ may be worth discussing, or related file types like MaterialX, OpenEXR, KTX2, WebP, and AVIF.

At present, we support only glTF (.gltf, .glb) files.

Will you support converting between 3D file formats?

Probably not. Conversions between arbitrary file formats are not clean 1:1 mappings and often require significant adjustments, making this a process better handled offline with a human involved. As the tooling and file format ecosystems evolve, we may reconsider.

Contributing

See CONTRIBUTING.md.

License

Apache License, Version 2.0. See LICENSE.

This repository is maintained by the Research & Development team at The New York Times and is provided as-is for your own use. For more information about R&D at the Times visit rd.nytimes.com.