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2022-05-11Cleanup: use '_num' suffix, mostly for curves & spline codeCampbell Barton
Replace tot/amount & size with num, in keeping with T85728.
2022-04-06Cleanup: Simplify if statements, clang tidyHans Goudey
2022-02-16Cleanup: Deduplicate functions for creating attributesHans Goudey
2022-02-11File headers: SPDX License migrationCampbell Barton
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
2021-12-07Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'blenkernel'Campbell Barton
- Added space below non doc-string comments to make it clear these aren't comments for the symbols directly below them. - Use doxy sections for some headers. - Minor improvements to doc-strings. Ref T92709
2021-11-16Geometry Nodes: refactor virtual array systemJacques Lucke
Goals of this refactor: * Simplify creating virtual arrays. * Simplify passing virtual arrays around. * Simplify converting between typed and generic virtual arrays. * Reduce memory allocations. As a quick reminder, a virtual arrays is a data structure that behaves like an array (i.e. it can be accessed using an index). However, it may not actually be stored as array internally. The two most important implementations of virtual arrays are those that correspond to an actual plain array and those that have the same value for every index. However, many more implementations exist for various reasons (interfacing with legacy attributes, unified iterator over all points in multiple splines, ...). With this refactor the core types (`VArray`, `GVArray`, `VMutableArray` and `GVMutableArray`) can be used like "normal values". They typically live on the stack. Before, they were usually inside a `std::unique_ptr`. This makes passing them around much easier. Creation of new virtual arrays is also much simpler now due to some constructors. Memory allocations are reduced by making use of small object optimization inside the core types. Previously, `VArray` was a class with virtual methods that had to be overridden to change the behavior of a the virtual array. Now,`VArray` has a fixed size and has no virtual methods. Instead it contains a `VArrayImpl` that is similar to the old `VArray`. `VArrayImpl` should rarely ever be used directly, unless a new virtual array implementation is added. To support the small object optimization for many `VArrayImpl` classes, a new `blender::Any` type is added. It is similar to `std::any` with two additional features. It has an adjustable inline buffer size and alignment. The inline buffer size of `std::any` can't be relied on and is usually too small for our use case here. Furthermore, `blender::Any` can store additional user-defined type information without increasing the stack size. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12986
2021-10-20Geometry Nodes: Make Random ID a builtin attribute, remove socketsHans Goudey
In order to address feedback that the "Stable ID" was not easy enough to use, remove the "Stable ID" output from the distribution node and the input from the instance on points node. Instead, the nodes write or read a builtin named attribute called `id`. In the future we may add more attributes like `edge_id` and `face_id`. The downside is that more behavior is invisible, which is les expected now that most attributes are passed around with node links. This behavior will have to be explained in the manual. The random value node's "ID" input that had an implicit index input is converted to a special implicit input that uses the `id` attribute if possible, but otherwise defaults to the index. There is no way to tell in the UI which it uses, except by knowing that rule and checking in the spreadsheet for the id attribute. Because it isn't always possible to create stable randomness, this attribute does not always exist, and it will be possible to remove it when we have the attribute remove node back, to improve performance. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12903
2021-04-17Geometry Nodes: use virtual arrays in internal attribute apiJacques Lucke
A virtual array is a data structure that is similar to a normal array in that its elements can be accessed by an index. However, a virtual array does not have to be a contiguous array internally. Instead, its elements can be layed out arbitrarily while element access happens through a virtual function call. However, the virtual array data structures are designed so that the virtual function call can be avoided in cases where it could become a bottleneck. Most commonly, a virtual array is backed by an actual array/span or is a single value internally, that is the same for every index. Besides those, there are many more specialized virtual arrays like the ones that provides vertex positions based on the `MVert` struct or vertex group weights. Not all attributes used by geometry nodes are stored in simple contiguous arrays. To provide uniform access to all kinds of attributes, the attribute API has to provide virtual array functionality that hides the implementation details of attributes. Before this refactor, the attribute API provided its own virtual array implementation as part of the `ReadAttribute` and `WriteAttribute` types. That resulted in unnecessary code duplication with the virtual array system. Even worse, it bound many algorithms used by geometry nodes to the specifics of the attribute API, even though they could also use different data sources (such as data from sockets, default values, later results of expressions, ...). This refactor removes the `ReadAttribute` and `WriteAttribute` types and replaces them with `GVArray` and `GVMutableArray` respectively. The `GV` stands for "generic virtual". The "generic" means that the data type contained in those virtual arrays is only known at run-time. There are the corresponding statically typed types `VArray<T>` and `VMutableArray<T>` as well. No regressions are expected from this refactor. It does come with one improvement for users. The attribute API can convert the data type on write now. This is especially useful when writing to builtin attributes like `material_index` with e.g. the Attribute Math node (which usually just writes to float attributes, while `material_index` is an integer attribute). Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10994
2021-04-08Spreadsheet: support showing data of specific nodeJacques Lucke
Previously, the spreadsheet editor could only show data of the original and of the final evaluated object. Now it is possible to show the data at some intermediate stages too. For that the mode has to be set to "Node" in the spreadsheet editor. Furthermore, the preview of a specific node has to be activated by clicking the new icon in the header of geometry nodes. The exact ui of this feature might be refined in upcoming commits. It is already very useful for debugging node groups in it's current state though. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10875
2021-03-23Cleanup: allow looking up size of unsupported domainsJacques Lucke
There isn't really a reason for not supporting it.
2021-03-13Geometry Nodes: Revert current normal attribute implementationHans Goudey
After further thought, the implementation of the "normal" attribute from D10541 is not the best approach to expose this data, mainly because it blindly copied existing design rather than using the best method in the context of the generalized attribute system. In Blender, vertex normals are simply a cache of the average normals from the surrounding / connected faces. Because we have automatic interpolation between domains already, we don't need a special `vertex_normal` attribute for this case, we can just let the generalized interpolation do the hard work where necessary, simplifying the set of built-in attributes to only include the `normal` attribute from faces. The fact that vertex normals are just a cache also raised another issue, because the cache could be dirty, so mutex locks were necessary to calculate normals. That isn't necessarily a problem, but it's nice to avoid where possible. Another downside of the current attribute naming is that after the point distribute node there would be two normal attributes. This commit reverts the `vertex_normal` attribute so that it can be replaced by the implementation in D10677. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10676
2021-03-10Geometry Nodes: move geometry component type enum to CJacques Lucke
This allows us to use it in rna for the spreadsheet editor.
2021-03-08Cleanup: Move geometry component implementations to separate filesHans Goudey
Currently the implementations specific to each geometry type are in the same file. This makes it difficult to tell which code is generic for all component types and which is specific to a certain type. The two files, `attribute_access.cc`, and `geometry_set.cc` are also getting quite long. This commit splits up the implementation for every geometry component, and adds an internal header file for the common parts of the attribute access code. This was discussed with Jacques Lucke.