Shader declares Material properties in a Properties block. If you want to access some of those properties in a shader program, you need to declare a Cg/HLSL variable with the same name and a matching type. An example is provided in Shader Tutorial: Vertex and Fragment Programs.
For example these shader properties:
_MyColor ("Some Color", Color) = (1,1,1,1)
_MyVector ("Some Vector", Vector) = (0,0,0,0)
_MyFloat ("My float", Float) = 0.5
_MyTexture ("Texture", 2D) = "white" {}
_MyCubemap ("Cubemap", CUBE) = "" {}
would be declared for access in Cg/HLSL code as:
fixed4 _MyColor; // low precision type is usually enough for colors
float4 _MyVector;
float _MyFloat;
sampler2D _MyTexture;
samplerCUBE _MyCubemap;
Cg/HLSL can also accept uniform keyword, but it is not necessary:
uniform float4 _MyColor;
Property types in ShaderLab map to Cg/HLSL variable types this way:
Shader property values are found and provided to shaders from these places:
The order of precedence is like above: per-instance data overrides everything; then Material data is used; and finally if shader property does not exist in these two places then global property value is used. Finally, if there’s no shader property value defined anywhere, then “default” (zero for floats, black for colors, empty white texture for textures) value will be provided.
Materials can contain both serialized and runtime-set property values.
Serialized data is all the properties defined in shader’s Properties block. Typically these are values that need to be stored in the material, and are tweakable by the user in Material Inspector.
A material can also have some properties that are used by the shader, but not declared in shader’s Properties block. Typically this is for properties that are set from script code at runtime, e.g. via Material.SetColor. Note that matrices and arrays can only exist as non-serialized runtime properties (since there’s no way to define them in Properties block).
For each texture that is setup as a shader/material property, Unity also sets up some extra information in additional vector properties.
Materials often have Tiling and Offset fields for their texture properties. This information is passed into shaders in a float4 {TextureName}_ST property:
x contains X tiling valuey contains Y tiling valuez contains X offset valuew contains Y offset valueFor example, if a shader contains texture named _MainTex, the tiling information will be in a _MainTex_ST vector.
{TextureName}_TexelSize - a float4 property contains texture size information:
x contains 1.0/widthy contains 1.0/heightz contains widthw contains height{TextureName}_HDR - a float4 property with information on how to decode a potentially HDR (e.g. RGBM-encoded) texture depending on the color space used. See DecodeHDR function in UnityCG.cginc shader include file.
When using Linear color space, all material color properties are supplied as sRGB colors, but are converted into linear values when passed into shaders.
For example, if your Properties shader block contains a Color property called “MyColor“, then the corresponding ”MyColor” HLSL variable will get the linear color value.
For properties that are marked as Float or Vector type, no color space conversions are done by default; it is assumed that they contain non-color data. It is possible to add [Gamma] attribute for float/vector properties to indicate that they are specified in sRGB space, just like colors (see Properties).