Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Follows the code style.
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Use a shorter/simpler license convention, stops the header taking so
much space.
Follow the SPDX license specification: https://spdx.org/licenses
- C/C++/objc/objc++
- Python
- Shell Scripts
- CMake, GNUmakefile
While most of the source tree has been included
- `./extern/` was left out.
- `./intern/cycles` & `./intern/atomic` are also excluded because they
use different header conventions.
doc/license/SPDX-license-identifiers.txt has been added to list SPDX all
used identifiers.
See P2788 for the script that automated these edits.
Reviewed By: brecht, mont29, sergey
Ref D14069
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This adds vertex creasing support for OpenSubDiv for modeling, rendering,
Alembic and USD I/O.
For modeling, vertex creasing follows the edge creasing implementation with an
operator accessible through the Vertex menu in Edit Mode, and some parameter in
the properties panel. The option in the Subsurf and Multires to use edge
creasing also affects vertex creasing.
The vertex crease data is stored as a CustomData layer, unlike edge creases
which for now are stored in `MEdge`, but will in the future also be moved to
a `CustomData` layer. See comments for details on the difference in behavior
for the `CD_CREASE` layer between egdes and vertices.
For Cycles this adds sockets on the Mesh node to hold data about which vertices
are creased (one socket for the indices, one for the weigths).
Viewport rendering of vertex creasing reuses the same color scheme as for edges
and creased vertices are drawn bigger than uncreased vertices.
For Alembic and USD, vertex crease support follows the edge crease
implementation, they are always read, but only exported if a `Subsurf` modifier
is present on the Mesh.
Reviewed By: brecht, fclem, sergey, sybren, campbellbarton
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10145
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MSVC used to warn about const mismatch for arguments passed by value.
Remove these as newer versions of MSVC no longer show this warning.
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This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for
faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last
position in the modifier list.
When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation
to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own
custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then,
buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of
compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so
on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose
logic is hardly GPU compatible).
This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used
in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation
shaders.
We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in
order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors
as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float
types.
In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers
or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`.
Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will
create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on
the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used.
Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under
Viewport -> Subdivision).
See patch description for benchmarks.
Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
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No functional changes.
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Remove the workaround for T59395 that increases the minimal refinement to 2
to work around an OpenSubdiv bug. This bug appears to be fixed in the latest
OpenSubdiv version we are using.
Problem found by Piotr Ostrowski.
Ref D9076
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This adds the option to either smooth the entire boundary, or to keep
corners sharp, for the Subdivision Surface and Multiresolution modifiers.
This mainly helps with compatibility with other software. The default
behavior remains to smooth the entire boundary.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8485
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This replaces header include guards with `#pragma once`.
A couple of include guards are not removed yet (e.g. `__RNA_TYPES_H__`),
because they are used in other places.
This patch has been generated by P1561 followed by `make format`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8466
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The CPU side implementation is done on a new dedicate base ground.
The GPU side must be redone anyway.
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Makes it so conversion is centralized in a single place.
We might consider removing any conversion, passing value as-is which
will be easier for I/O scripts to match crease. The downside of that
would be loose of control range in certain qualities and values of
crease.
There shouldn't be any functional changes in this commit.
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The actual naming might also be a subject to change, especially the one
around `level`. Tricky part here is that at some point in the API there
will be change from Blender modifier's Quality to OpenSubdiv's Level,
but which API level is most suitable for this?
At least now meaning of settings is better documented ans should be
clear what's going on.
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Apply clang format as proposed in T53211.
For details on usage and instructions for migrating branches
without conflicts, see:
https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Tools/ClangFormat
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This is something where there is no single correct behavior,
sometimes it's needed to ignore the crease to make mesh more
smooth. But sometimes crease is to be considered after first
subdivision surface: for example, when adding extra subdivisions
for render-time displacement.
Made it an option whether modifier needs to take crease into
account or not.
Existing files should be openable in the 2.7 compatible way,
to re-create an old behavior the options is to be manually
disabled in the modifier settings.
Reviewers: brecht
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D4652
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On CCG side it is done similar to displacement, where we have
a dedicated functor which evaluates displacement. Might be seemed
as an overkill, but allows to decouple SubdivCCG from mesh entirely,
and maybe even free up coarse mesh in order to save some memory.
Some weak-looking aspect is the call to update normals from the
draw manager. Ideally, the manager will only draw what is already
evaluated. But it's a bit tricky to find a best place for this since
we avoid dependency graph updates during sculpt as much as possible.
The new code mimics the old code, this is how it was in 2.7.
Fix shading part of T58307.
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While \file doesn't need an argument, it can't have another doxy
command after it.
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Move \ingroup onto same line to be more compact and
make it clear the file is in the group.
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BF-admins agree to remove header information that isn't useful,
to reduce noise.
- BEGIN/END license blocks
Developers should add non license comments as separate comment blocks.
No need for separator text.
- Contributors
This is often invalid, outdated or misleading
especially when splitting files.
It's more useful to git-blame to find out who has developed the code.
See P901 for script to perform these edits.
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This is actually a workaround for the crash in OpenSubdiv.
Topology refiner will have a crash when special conditions
are met:
- Refiner is configured to use infinitely sharp patches.
- Refinement happens for the level 1 (which we call Quality 1 on
Blender side).
- Mesh has non-quad faces.
The workaround is to force refinement to happen to level 2 (or
quality 2 on Blender side) when those conditions are met.
Later on with the next OpenSubdiv update we can remove this
workaround, since there was work done on OpenSubdiv side to
deal better with such configurations.
The modifier will now be somewhat slower, but this will be
compensated with upcoming topology cache enabled by default.
The workaround is done when initializing settings, so the
comparison of topology refiner settings is happening without
any extra workarounds there.
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Before that only normal component was averaged, which is not
really correct.
Unfortunately, the new code is somewhat slower due to more
involved math to deal properly with non-quad faces, but the
plan is to move averaging from runtime to edit time, This
means, that mdisps will always be continuous around the edges
and no averaging on every frame change of animated character
will be needed.
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Makes it more clear to see what was exactly happening at
the last invocation of subsurf modifier.
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This commit makes it so OpenSubdiv's topology refiner is kept
in memory and reused for until topology changes. There are the
following modifications which causes topology refiner to become
invalid:
- Change in a mesh topology (for example, vertices, edges, and
faces connectivity).
- Change in UV islands (adding new islands, merging them and
so on),
- Change in UV smoothing options.
- Change in creases.
- Change in Catmull-Clark / Simple subdivisions.
The following limitations are known:
- CPU evaluator is not yet cached.
- UV islands topology is not checked.
The UV limitation is currently a stopper for making this cache
enabled by default.
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Causes clang-format not to detect header guards,
indenting all preprocessor lines in the header.
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Only affects internal API, bout could be exposed as an option for
the compatibility reasons with other software.
Is a part of some ongoing development of multires, but might or
might not be used.
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Attempts to substitude CCGDM with an OpenSubdiv based structure
which has less abstraction levels. The missing part in this
substitude is a face pointers which old CCGDM/multires code was
using to stitch faces (averaging boundaries).
Another curial bit missing: "reshaping" of multires CD_MDISPS
to the state of new PBVH grids.
The new code is only available when OpenSubdiv modifier is
enabled (WITH_OPENSUBDIV_MODIFIER=ON) and with debug value of
128. This is so this WIP code is not interfering with current
production machines in the studio.
Reviewers: brecht
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3685
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This is something what we need to know quite often from various places.
Added it as a cached value in Subdiv itself, so it can be queried easily
from any area.
Shouldn't be a problem from memory usage point of view, it's 4MB per
1M faces coarse mesh. This is very low percentage of mesh itself, and
even lower percentage of highres subdivided mesh.
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This makes it more generic process to perform actions which
depend on ptex face + (u, v) and on subdivided vertex index.
Currently it is still just a subdivision calculation process,
but same foreach callbacks can easily be used to propagate
displacement from known vertex locations back to displacement
grids.
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Adds a displacement support for OpenSubdiov based subsurf object implemented
as a callback which gives vector displacement in object space. Currently is
implemented to calculate displacement based on myltires displacement grids,
but we can support things in the future if needed.
Submitting to review to see if there is something obviously wrong in the
direction (old multires code was sharing same displacement code to both
calculate final displaced mesh and reshape an existing one, which is rather
confusing and probably can be done more cleanly?).
Reviewers: brecht
Reviewed By: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D3604
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Currently behaves same as subsurf, support of displacement is the
next task in the line to tackle!
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