Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
|
Seems re-loading module invalidates memory pointers by the looks of it,
which gives an error on the next kernel call.
Not sure how to move memory pointer from one CUDA module to another one,
so for now simply disabling kernel re-load for CUDA devices. Not ideal,
but better than failing render.
Feature-selective option for CUDA is not an official feature anyway.
|
|
- Some arguments were inapproriatry tagged as unused
using (void)foo semantic.
Only use such semantic in tricky casses, when something
needs to be ignored in release builds or something is
dependent on tricky ifndef policy.
For rest of the cases just use void foo(int /bar*/)
semantic, which ensures variable is not used. Solves
confusion and code running out of sync with later
development.
- Used proper unused semantic to some arguments.
- Added braces to make code easier to follow, tricky
indentation with ifdef, uh.
|
|
Conflicts:
source/blender/blenloader/intern/versioning_270.c
source/blender/depsgraph/intern/depsgraph_tag.cc
source/blender/editors/mask/mask_draw.c
|
|
|
|
Extremely bright pixels in the rendered image cause the denoising algorithm
to produce extremely noticable artifacts. Therefore, a heuristic is needed
to exclude these pixels from the filtering process.
The new approach calculates the 75% percentile of the 5x5 neighborhood of
each pixel and flags the pixel if it is more than twice as bright.
During the reconstruction process, flagged pixels are skipped. Therefore,
they don't cause any problems for neighboring pixels, and the outlier pixels
themselves are replaced by a prediction of their actual value based on their
feature pass values and the neighboring pixels.
Therefore, the denoiser now also works as a smarter despeckling filter that
uses a more accurate prediction of the pixel instead of a simple average.
This can be used even if denoising isn't wanted by setting the denoising
radius to 1.
|
|
|
|
This commit contains the first part of the new Cycles denoising option,
which filters the resulting image using information gathered during rendering
to get rid of noise while preserving visual features as well as possible.
To use the option, enable it in the render layer options. The default settings
fit a wide range of scenes, but the user can tweak individual settings to
control the tradeoff between a noise-free image, image details, and calculation
time.
Note that the denoiser may still change in the future and that some features
are not implemented yet. The most important missing feature is animation
denoising, which uses information from multiple frames at once to produce a
flicker-free and smoother result. These features will be added in the future.
Finally, thanks to all the people who supported this project:
- Google (through the GSoC) and Theory Studios for sponsoring the development
- The authors of the papers I used for implementing the denoiser (more details
on them will be included in the technical docs)
- The other Cycles devs for feedback on the code, especially Sergey for
mentoring the GSoC project and Brecht for the code review!
- And of course the users who helped with testing, reported bugs and things
that could and/or should work better!
|
|
|
|
Global size y needs to be a multiple of 16.
|
|
This way we don't re-load kernels for every sample in the viewport.
Additionally, we don't risk global size changed inbetween of samples.
|
|
This upgrade the drawing code to use latest opengl calls.
Also, it adds a fallback shader for opencolorio.
Reviewers: sergey, brecht
Subscribers: merwin, fclem
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2652
|
|
Not sure this is the best way to do things for CUDA but its much better than
being unimplemented.
|
|
|
|
|
|
This deprecates CUDA 7.5.
|
|
The idea is to make include statements more explicit and obvious where the
file is coming from, additionally reducing chance of wrong header being
picked up.
For example, it was not obvious whether bvh.h was refferring to builder
or traversal, whenter node.h is a generic graph node or a shader node
and cases like that.
Surely this might look obvious for the active developers, but after some
time of not touching the code it becomes less obvious where file is coming
from.
This was briefly mentioned in T50824 and seems @brecht is fine with such
explicitness, but need to agree with all active developers before committing
this.
Please note that this patch is lacking changes related on GPU/OpenCL
support. This will be solved if/when we all agree this is a good idea to move
forward.
Reviewers: brecht, lukasstockner97, maiself, nirved, dingto, juicyfruit, swerner
Reviewed By: lukasstockner97, maiself, nirved, dingto
Subscribers: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2586
|
|
|
|
Overflow led to the state buffer being too small and the split kernel to
get stuck doing nothing forever.
|
|
initialization function
|
|
|
|
By calculating the size of the state buffer in the kernel rather than the host
less code is needed and the size actually reflects the requested features.
Will also be a little faster in some cases because of larger global work size.
|
|
This is to help debug and track memory usage for generic buffers. We
have similar for textures already since those require a name, but for
buffers the name is only for debugging proposes.
|
|
|
|
This is useful for when theres no host side memory attched to the buffer
|
|
Patch by @swerner, thanks!
|
|
|
|
The Progress system in Cycles had two limitations so far:
- It just counted tiles, but ignored their size. For example, when rendering a 600x500 image with 512x512 tiles, the right 88x500 tile would count for 50% of the progress, although it only covers 15% of the image.
- Scene update time was incorrectly counted as rendering time - therefore, the remaining time started very long and gradually decreased.
This patch fixes both problems:
First of all, the Progress now has a function to ignore time spans, and that is used to ignore scene update time.
The larger change is the tile size: Instead of counting samples per tile, so that the final value is num_samples*num_tiles, the code now counts every sample for every pixel, so that the final value is num_samples*num_pixels.
Along with that, some unused variables were removed from the Progress and Session classes.
Reviewers: brecht, sergey, #cycles
Subscribers: brecht, candreacchio, sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2214
|
|
Should be no functional changes.
|
|
selection
Previously, it was only possible to choose a single GPU or all of that type (CUDA or OpenCL).
Now, a toggle button is displayed for every device.
These settings are tied to the PCI Bus ID of the devices, so they're consistent across hardware addition and removal (but not when swapping/moving cards).
From the code perspective, the more important change is that now, the compute device properties are stored in the Addon preferences of the Cycles addon, instead of directly in the User Preferences.
This allows for a cleaner implementation, removing the Cycles C API functions that were called by the RNA code to specify the enum items.
Note that this change is neither backwards- nor forwards-compatible, but since it's only a User Preference no existing files are broken.
Reviewers: #cycles, brecht
Reviewed By: #cycles, brecht
Subscribers: brecht, juicyfruit, mib2berlin, Blendify
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2338
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Basically just moves cached kernels from ~/.config/blender/BLENDER_VERSION to
~/.cache/cycles/kernels. This has following benefits:
- Follows XDG specification more closely,
not as if it's totally crucial or measurable by users, but still nice.
- Prevents unexpected sizes of config folder, makes disk space used in more
predictable for users way.
- Allows to share kernels across multiple Blender versions,
which makes it easier debugging at the times close to release.
- "Copy Previous Settings" operator will no longer be copying possibly
gigabytes of cached kernels, which used to lead to really nast disk usage
and annoying delays of copying settings.
- In the future we can have some smart logic to clear old unused cached
kernels.
Currently only done for Linux and OSX. Windows still follows old "cache"
folder logic, but it's not really important for now because we don't
support kernel compilation on this platform yet.
Reviewers: dingto, juicyfruit, brecht
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2197
|
|
Atm OpenEXR half files benefit from this and will use only 1/2 of the memory now. More space for HDRs!
Part of my GSoC 2016.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This way we can easily switch between toolkits without worrying
whether some kernel was compiled with old or new CUDA toolkit.
It's also now possible to switch machine architecture and have
proper cached kernel detected. Not as if it happens every day,
but i did such a bitness switch back in the days :)
|
|
All the changes are mainly giving explicit tips on inlining functions,
so they match how inlining worked with previous toolkit.
This make kernel compiled by CUDA 8 render in average with same speed
as previous kernels. Some scenes are somewhat faster, some of them are
somewhat slower. But slowdown is within 1% so far.
On a positive side it allows us to enable newer generation cards on
buildbots (so GTX 10x0 will be officially supported soon).
|
|
It is really handy to know which one is display when having two cards of
same type in the machine.
|
|
Some of these values can get quite large and are hard to read, adding this
makes it easy to read them at a glance.
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2039
|
|
|
|
|
|
This adds support for CUDA Texture objects (also known as Bindless textures) for Kepler GPUs (Geforce 6xx and above).
This is used for all 2D/3D textures, data still uses arrays as before.
User benefits:
* No more limits of image textures on Kepler.
We had 5 float4 and 145 byte4 slots there before, now we have 1024 float4 and 1024 byte4.
This can be extended further if we need to (just change the define).
* Single channel textures slots (byte and float) are now supported on Kepler as well (1024 slots for each type).
ToDo / Issues:
* 3D textures don't work yet, at least don't show up during render. I have no idea whats wrong yet.
* Dynamically allocate bindless_mapping array?
I hope Fermi still works fine, but that should be tested on a Fermi card before pushing to master.
Part of my GSoC 2016.
Reviewers: sergey, #cycles, brecht
Subscribers: swerner, jtheninja, brecht, sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D1999
|
|
Found by Brecht, thanks!
|
|
|
|
If the CUDA Toolkit is installed and the user is on Linux,
adaptive, feature based CUDA runtime compile is now possible to enable via:
* Environment flag CYCLES_CUDA_ADAPTIVE_COMPILE or
* Debug menu (Debug value 256) in the Cycles UI.
|
|
float (single channel) and half_float slots.
Should be no functional changes, tested CPU and CUDA.
|
|
|
|
|