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Home/ Questions/Q 1041813
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T15:24:37+00:00 2026-05-16T15:24:37+00:00

I’m using OpenGL ES 1.1 to render a large view in an iPhone app.

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I’m using OpenGL ES 1.1 to render a large view in an iPhone app. I have a “screenshot”/”save” function, which basically creates a new GL context offscreen, and then takes exactly the same geometry and renders it to the offscreen context. This produces the expected result.

Yet for reasons I don’t understand, the amount of time (measured with CFAbsoluteTimeGetCurrent before and after) that the actual draw calls take when sending to the offscreen buffer is more than an order of magnitude longer than when drawing to the main framebuffer that backs an actual UIView. All of the GL state is the same for both, and the geometry list is the same, and the sequence of calls to draw is the same.

Note that there happens to be a LOT of geometry here– the order of magnitude is clearly measurable and repeatable. Also note that I’m not timing the glReadPixels call, which is the thing that I believe actually pulls data back from the GPU. This is just a mesaure of the time spent in e.g. glDrawArrays.

I’ve tried:

  • Render that geometry to the screen again just after doing the offscreen render: takes the same quick time for the screen draw.
  • Render the offscreen thing twice in a row– both times show the same slow draw speed.

Is this an inherent limitation of offscreen buffers? Or might I be missing something fundamental here?

Thanks for your insight/explanation!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T15:24:37+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 3:24 pm

    Your best bet is probably to sample both your offscreen rendering and window system rendering each running in a tight loop with the CPU Sampler in Instruments and compare the results to see what differences there are.

    Also, could you be a bit more clear about what exactly you mean by “render the offscreen thing twice in a row?” You mentioned at the beginning of the question that you “create a new GL context offscreen”—do you mean a new framebuffer and renderbuffer, or a completely new EAGLContext? Depending on how many new resources and objects you’re creating in order to do your offscreen rendering, the driver may need to do a lot of work to set up these resources the first time you use them in a draw call. If you’re just screenshotting the same content you were putting onscreen, you shouldn’t even need to do any of this—it should be sufficient to call glReadPixels before -[EAGLContext presentRenderbuffer:], since the backbuffer contents will still be defined at that point.

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