gltfpack is a tool that can automatically optimize glTF files to reduce the download size and improve loading and rendering speed.
You can download a pre-built binary for gltfpack on Releases page, or install npm package. Native binaries are recommended over npm since they can work with larger files, run faster, and support texture compression.
To convert a glTF file using gltfpack, run the command-line binary like this on an input .gltf
/.glb
/.obj
file (run it without arguments for a list of options):
gltfpack -i scene.gltf -o scene.glb
gltfpack substantially changes the glTF data by optimizing the meshes for vertex fetch and transform cache, quantizing the geometry to reduce the memory consumption and size, merging meshes to reduce the draw call count, quantizing and resampling animations to reduce animation size and simplify playback, and pruning the node tree by removing or collapsing redundant nodes. It will also simplify the meshes when requested to do so.
By default gltfpack outputs regular .glb
/.gltf
files that have been optimized for GPU consumption using various cache optimizers and quantization. These files can be loaded by GLTF loaders that support KHR_mesh_quantization
extension such as three.js (r111+) and Babylon.js (4.1+).
When using -c
option, gltfpack outputs compressed .glb
/.gltf
files that use meshoptimizer codecs to reduce the download size further. Loading these files requires extending GLTF loaders with support for EXT_meshopt_compression extension; three.js supports it in r122+ (requires calling GLTFLoader.setMeshoptDecoder
), Babylon.js supports it in 5.0+ without further setup.
For better compression, you can use -cc
option which applies additional compression; additionally make sure that your content delivery method is configured to use deflate (gzip) - meshoptimizer codecs are designed to produce output that can be compressed further with general purpose compressors.
gltfpack can also compress textures using Basis Universal format stored in a KTX2 container (-tc
flag, requires support for KHR_texture_basisu
). Textures can also be embedded into .bin
/.glb
output using -te
flag.
When using compressed files, js/meshopt_decoder.js or js/meshopt_decoder.module.js
needs to be loaded to provide the WebAssembly decoder module like this:
import { MeshoptDecoder } from './meshopt_decoder.module.js';
...
var loader = new GLTFLoader();
loader.setMeshoptDecoder(MeshoptDecoder);
loader.load('pirate.glb', function (gltf) { scene.add(gltf.scene); });
When using Three.js, this module can be imported from three.js repository from examples/jsm/libs/meshopt_decoder.module.js
.
Note that meshopt_decoder
assumes that WebAssembly is supported. This is the case for all modern browsers; if support for legacy browsers such as Internet Explorer 11 is desired, it's recommended to use -cf
flag when creating the glTF content. This will create and load fallback uncompressed buffers, but only on browsers that don't support WebAssembly.
By default gltfpack makes certain assumptions when optimizing the scenes, for example meshes that belong to nodes that aren't animated can be merged together, and has some defaults that represent a tradeoff between precision and size that are picked to fit most use cases. However, in some cases the resulting .gltf
file needs to retain some way for the application to manipulate individual scene elements, and in other cases precision or size are more important to optimize for. gltfpack has a rich set of command line options to control various aspects of its behavior, with the full list available via gltfpack -h
.
The following settings are frequently used to reduce the resulting data size:
-cc
: produce compressed gltf/glb files (requiresEXT_meshopt_compression
)-tc
: convert all textures to KTX2 with BasisU supercompression (requiresKHR_texture_basisu
and may require-tp
flag for compatibility with WebGL 1)-mi
: use mesh instancing when serializing references to the same meshes (requiresEXT_mesh_gpu_instancing
)-si R
: simplify meshes targeting triangle count ratio R (default: 1; R should be between 0 and 1)
The following settings are frequently used to restrict some optimizations:
-kn
: keep named nodes and meshes attached to named nodes so that named nodes can be transformed externally-km
: keep named materials and disable named material merging-ke
: keep extras data
gltfpack is available to anybody free of charge, under the terms of MIT License (see LICENSE.md).