The Current State of DirectX 12 & WDDM 2.0

Although DirectX 12 is up and running in the latest public release of Windows 10, it and many of its related components are still under development. Windows 10 itself is still feature-incomplete, so what we’re looking at here today doesn’t even qualify as beta software. As a result today’s preview should be taken as just that: an early preview. There are still bugs, and performance and compatibility is subject to change. But as of now everything is far enough along that we can finally get a reasonable look at what DirectX 12 is capable of.

From a technical perspective the DirectX 12 API is just one part of a bigger picture. Like Microsoft’s last couple of DirectX 11 minor version upgrades, DirectX 12 goes hand-in-hand with a new version of the Windows Display Driver Model, WDDM 2.0. In fact WDDM 2.0 is the biggest change to WDDM since the driver model was introduced in Windows Vista, and as a result DirectX 12 itself represents a very large overhaul of the Windows GPU ecosystem.

Top: Radeon R9 290X. Bottom: GeForce GTX 980

Microsoft has not released too many details on WDDM 2.0 so far – more information will be released around GDC 2015 – but WDDM 2.0 is based around enabling DirectX 12, adding the necessary features to the kernel and display drivers in order to support the API above it. Among the features tied to WDDM 2.0 are DX12’s explicit memory management and dynamic resource indexing, both of which wouldn’t have been nearly as performant under WDDM 1.3. WDDM 2.0 is also responsible for some of the baser CPU efficiency optimizations in DX12, such as changes to how memory residency is handled and how DX12 applications can more explicitly control residence.

The overhauling of WDDM for 2.0 means that graphics drivers are impacted as well as the OS, and like Microsoft, NVIDIA and AMD have been preparing for WDDM 2.0 with updated graphics drivers. These drivers are still a work in progress, and as a result not all hardware support is enabled and not all bugs have been worked out.

DirectX 12 Support Status
  Current Status Supported At Launch
AMD GCN 1.2 (285) Working Yes
AMD GCN 1.1 (290/260 Series) Working Yes
AMD GCN 1.0 (7000/200 Series) Buggy Yes
NVIDIA Maxwell 2 (900 Series) Working Yes
NVIDIA Maxwell 1 (750 Series) Working Yes
NVIDIA Kepler (600/700 Series) Working Yes
NVIDIA Fermi (400/500 Series) Not Active Yes

In short, among AMD and NVIDIA their latest products are up and running in WDDM 2.0, but not on all of their earlier products. In AMD’s case GCN 1.0 cards are supported under their WDDM 2.0 driver, but we are encountering texturing issues in Star Swarm that do not occur with GCN 1.1 and later. Meanwhile in NVIDIA’s case, as is common for NVIDIA beta drivers they only ship with support enabled for their newer GPUs – Kepler, Maxwell 1, and Maxwell 2 – with Fermi support disabled. Both AMD and NVIIDA have already committed to supporting DirectX 12 (and by extension WDDM 2.0) on GCN 1.0 and later and Fermi and later respectively, so while we can’t test these products today, they should be working by the time DirectX 12 ships.

Also absent for the moment is a definition for DirectX 12’s Feature Level 12_0 and DirectX 11’s 11_3. Separate from the low-level API itself, DirectX 12 and its high-level counterpart DirectX 11.3 will introduce new rendering features such as volume tiled resources and conservative rasterization. While all of the above listed video cards will support the DirectX 12 low-level API, only the very newest video cards will support FL 12_0, and consequently be fully DX12 compliant on both a feature and API basis. Like so many other aspects of DirectX 12, Microsoft is saving any discussion of feature levels for GDC, at which time we should find out what the final feature requirements will be and which (if any) current cards will fully support FL 12_0.

Finally, with Microsoft’s announcement of their Windows 10 plans last month, Microsoft is also finally clarifying their plans for the deployment of DirectX 12. Because DirectX 12 and WDDM 2.0 are tied at the hip, and by extension tied to Windows 10, DirectX 12 will only be available on Windows 10. Windows 8/8.1 and Windows 7 will not be receiving DirectX 12 support.

DirectX 12 Supported OSes
  Will Support DX12? Required WDDM Version
Windows 10 Yes 2.0
Windows 8.1 No N/A
Windows 8 No N/A
Windows 7 No N/A

Backporting DirectX 12 to earlier OSes would require backporting WDDM 2.0 as well, which brings with it several issues due to the fact that WDDM 2.0 is a kernel component. Microsoft would either have to compromise on WDDM 2.0 features in order to make it work on these older kernels, or alternatively would have to more radically overhaul these kernels to accommodate the full WDDM 2.0 feature set, the latter of which is a significant engineering task and carries a significant risk of breaking earlier Windows installations. Microsoft has already tried this once before in backporting parts of Direct3D 11.1 and WDDM 1.2 to Windows 7, only to discover that even that smaller-scale project had compatibility problems. A backport of DirectX 12 would in turn be even more problematic.

The bright side of all of this is that with Microsoft’s plans to offer Windows 10 as a free upgrade for Windows 7/8/8.1 users, the issue is largely rendered moot. Though DirectX 12 isn’t being backported, Windows users will instead be able to jump forward for free, so unlike Windows 8 this will not require spending money on a new OS just to gain access to the latest version of DirectX. This in turn is consistent with Microsoft’s overall plans to bring all Windows users up to Windows 10 rather than letting the market get fragmented among different Windows versions (and risk repeating another XP), so the revelation that DirectX 12 will not get backported has largely been expected since Microsoft’s Windows 10 announcement.

Meanwhile we won’t dwell on the subject too much, but DirectX 12 being limited to Windows 10 does open up a window of opportunity for Mantle and OpenGL Next. With Mantle already working on Windows 7/8 and OpenGL Next widely expected to be similarly portable, these APIs will be the only low-level APIs available to earlier Windows users.

The DirectX 12 Preview Star Swarm & The Test
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  • B3an - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Thanks for posting this. This is the kind of thing i come to AT for.
  • Notmyusualid - Sunday, February 8, 2015 - link

    And me.
  • dragosmp - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Looking at the Dx11 vs Dx12 per core load it looks like the per-core performance is the limiting factor in Dx11, not the number of cores. As such, CPUs like the AMD's AM1 & FM2 platforms with low per-core performance would benefit from Dx12 more than Intel's CPUs that already have high IPC. (It may be that even the FX may become decent gaming CPUs with their 8 integer cores and not limited by 1-core turbo)
  • guskline - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Thank you for a great article Ryan.
  • okp247 - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Cheers for the article, Ryan. Very interesting subject and a good read.

    There seems to be issues with the AMD cards though, especially under DX11. Other testers report FPS @ mid 20's to early 30's in 1080P extreme settings even with the old 7970 under Win7/DX11.
    The power consumption is also quite low. 241 watts for 290X with 6-core i7, when Crysis 3 pulls 375 also with 6-core i7 in your original review of the card. The card seems positively starved ;-)

    This could be the OS, the graphics API or the game. Possibly all three. Whatever it is, it looks like a big issue that's undermining your test.

    On a completely different note: maybe you could get the developer to spill the beans about their work with both APIs? (Mantle and DX12). I think that would also be a very interesting read.
  • OrphanageExplosion - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Yup, this is the big takeaway from this article - http://images.anandtech.com/graphs/graph8962/71451...

    AMD seems to have big issues with CPU load on DX11 - the gulf between NVIDIA and AMD is colossal. Probably not an issue when all reviews use i7s to test GPUs, but think of the more budget orientated gamer with his i3 or Athlon X4. This is the area where reviews will say that AMD dominates, but NOT if the CPU can't run the GPU effectively.
  • ColdSnowden - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    This reflects what I said above. AMD radeons have a much slower batch submission time. Does that mean that using an Nvidia card with a faster batch submission time can lessen cpu bottlenecking, so perhaps Guild Wars Two would run better with an nvidia GPU as my FX 4170 would be less likely to bottleneck it.
  • ObscureAngel - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Basically AMD now requires much better CPU than nvidia to render the same "drawcalls"
    I benchmarked my self recently my Phenom II X4 945 OC 3.7GHZ with my HD 7850 vs GTX 770.

    Obviously GTX 770 outperform my HD 7850.
    Altough i benchmarked star swarm and games where my GPU usage was very below 90% which means i was bottlenecked by the CPU.

    Guess what:
    Star swarm: AMD DX11: 7fps, Nvidia DX11: 17fps AMD Mantle: 24fps.

    I tested Saints Row IV where i get all the time bottleneck with my AMD card where i get all the time more frames more close to 30 than 60, and with GTX 770 i get more 60 than 30.

    Even NFS Rivals i have drops on GPU usage to 50% in some locations and that causes drops to 24fps.
    With nvidia again, i have 30 rocking stable, unlocking the framerate i have 60 most of the time and where i drop to 24fps due to my CPU with nvidia i have 48fps.

    Its not a good example since the GTX 770 is far more powerfull, but you have more proofs with weaker nvidia GPUS in low end cpus really improve the performance comparing to AMD cards that seems to require more power.

    I try to contact AMD but i nobody replied ever, i even register in GURU3D since there is a guy that works on AMD, and he never replied, same goes to many persons there are just fanboys and attacked me instead of trying to make pressure for AMD to fix this.

    I'm serious worried with that problem, cause my CPU is old and weak, and the extra frames that nvidia offers in DX11 is really big.
    Dispite the fact that DX12 is very close to release, i am pretty sure that many games will continue to be released in DX11, and the number of games with mantle it just fit in my hand.
    So i am thinking in selling my HD 7850 and buy the next 950ti just because of that, its far more economic than buy a new CPU and motherboard.
    I already know this problem for more than 6 months, tried to convince everybody and trying to contact amd, but i am alway attacked by fanboys or get ignored by AMD..
    So if AMD reply to me, maybe they dont like my money.

    Altough nothing is free, the DX11 optimizations on Nvidia makes eat more Vram and in some games like dying light and ryse i notice more stuttering and sometimes more time to load textures..
    Same goes if you use mantle, it eats more vram too.
    I expect that DX12 will need more Vram too.

    If 2gb is getting short lately prepare that will get shorter if it will ear more vram as Nvidia DX11 and AMD Mantle.

    Regards.
  • okp247 - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    I think the nVidia cards are actually being gimped as well. On Win7/DX11 people are reporting 70-80 FPS @ extreme settings, 1080 with the two top 900-cards on everything from old i5's to FX's.
    They are just not being hurt as much as AMDs, maybe because of more mature drivers and/or different architecture.
  • Ryan Smith - Saturday, February 7, 2015 - link

    Please note that we're using the RTS demo. If you're getting scores that high, you're probably using the Follow demo, which is entirely different from run-to-run.

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