Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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Use a more direct method of checking if a matrix is negative instead of
using cross & dot product.
Also replace some determinant_m3() < 0 checks with is_negative_m3.
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Metaball, curve, text, and surface objects use the geometry component
system to add evaluated mesh object instances to the dependency graph
"for render engine" iterator. Therefore it is unnecessary to process
those object types in these loops-- it would either be redundant work
or a no-op.
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This commit moves the hide status of mesh vertices, edges, and faces
from the `ME_FLAG` to optional generic boolean attributes. Storing this
data as generic attributes can significantly simplify and improve code,
as described in T95965.
The attributes are called `.hide_vert`, `.hide_edge`, and `.hide_poly`,
using the attribute name semantics discussed in T97452. The `.` prefix
means they are "UI attributes", so they still contain original data
edited by users, but they aren't meant to be accessed procedurally by
the user in arbitrary situations. They are also be hidden in the
spreadsheet and the attribute list by default,
Until 4.0, the attributes are still written to and read from the mesh
in the old way, so neither forward nor backward compatibility are
affected. This means memory requirements will be increased by one byte
per element when the hide status is used. When the flags are removed
completely, requirements will decrease when hiding is unused.
Further notes:
* Some code can be further simplified to skip some processing when the
hide attributes don't exist.
* The data is still stored in flags for `BMesh`, necessitating some
complexity in the conversion to and from `Mesh`.
* Access to the "hide" property of mesh elements in RNA is slower.
The separate boolean arrays should be used where possible.
Ref T95965
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14685
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textures are present
Report T98781 and part of T97642: the MTLMaterial info only captures
image nodes and the default socket values. When the image information
is present, do not emit the socket defaults - the .MTL spec states
they are multiplied together, but the default value is not used
in blender when the socket is connected.
Also contains svn tests repository update to extend the test coverage,
and update test expectation outputs.
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The Python based exporter was replacing spaces with underscores
in object/group names, mostly to handle cases where names could begin
or end with spaces. The new exporter was not doing that. Note: spaces
in material names were already handled by the new exporter.
Fixes T97769. Updated test coverage expectations; one of the test
files has an object with a space in the name.
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Since 1a81d268a19f2f140, materials on object data can change during
evaluation. But a different function is necessary to retrieve materials
taking that into account.
Solves part of T96721.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15595
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Currently, there are two attribute API. The first, defined in `BKE_attribute.h` is
accessible from RNA and C code. The second is implemented with `GeometryComponent`
and is only accessible in C++ code. The second is widely used, but only being
accessible through the `GeometrySet` API makes it awkward to use, and even impossible
for types that don't correspond directly to a geometry component like `CurvesGeometry`.
This patch adds a new attribute API, designed to replace the `GeometryComponent`
attribute API now, and to eventually replace or be the basis of the other one.
The basic idea is that there is an `AttributeAccessor` class that allows code to
interact with a set of attributes owned by some geometry. The accessor itself has
no ownership. `AttributeAccessor` is a simple type that can be passed around by
value. That makes it easy to return it from functions and to store it in containers.
For const-correctness, there is also a `MutableAttributeAccessor` that allows
changing individual and can add or remove attributes.
Currently, `AttributeAccessor` is composed of two pointers. The first is a pointer
to the owner of the attribute data. The second is a pointer to a struct with
function pointers, that is similar to a virtual function table. The functions
know how to access attributes on the owner.
The actual attribute access for geometries is still implemented with the `AttributeProvider`
pattern, which makes it easy to support different sources of attributes on a
geometry and simplifies dealing with built-in attributes.
There are different ways to get an attribute accessor for a geometry:
* `GeometryComponent.attributes()`
* `CurvesGeometry.attributes()`
* `bke::mesh_attributes(const Mesh &)`
* `bke::pointcloud_attributes(const PointCloud &)`
All of these also have a `_for_write` variant that returns a `MutabelAttributeAccessor`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15280
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Removes the following macros for scene/render frame values:
- `CFRA`
- `SUBFRA`
- `SFRA`
- `EFRA`
These macros don't add much, other than saving a few characters when typing.
It's not immediately clear what they refer to, they just hide what they
actually access. Just be explicit and clear about that.
Plus these macros gave read and write access to the variables, so eyesores like
this would be done (eyesore because it looks like assigning to a constant):
```
CFRA = some_frame_nbr;
```
Reviewed By: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15311
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Some I/O code paths (Collada, OBJ) were using mat3_from_axis_conversion
followed by transpose_m3, instead of swapping the axis arguments
which achieves exactly the same result.
Reviewed By: Aras Pranckevicius
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15158
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OBJ vertex color related tests were not producing identical results
across various platforms, primarily due to sRGB<->Linear color space
conversions.
While D15193 has just made the color space conversion accuracy match
much closer between platforms, it's still not 100% the same.
This change reduces the amount of decimal places used for exporting
vertex colors, to 4 digits (down from 6). Vertex normals were
already always printed with 4 digits, and colors are conceptually
similar (usually 0..1 range etc.).
This makes the vertex color tests pass again, so re-enable them
after adjusting to 4 decimals expectations.
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Adds support for vertex colors to OBJ I/O.
Importer:
- Supports both "xyzrgb" and "MRGB" vertex color formats.
- Whenever vertex color is present in the file for a model, it is
imported and a Color attribute is created (per-vertex, full float
color data type). Color coming from the file is assumed to be sRGB,
and is converted to linear upon import.
Exporter:
- Option to export the vertex colors. Defaults to "off", since not
all 3rd party software supports vertex colors.
- When the option is "on", if a mesh has a color attribute layer,
the active one is exported in "xyzrgb" form. If the mesh has
per-face-corner colors, they are averaged on the vertices.
Colors are converted from linear to sRGB upon export.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15159
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A new experimentatl STL importer, written in C++. Roughly 7-9x faster than the
Python based one.
Reviewed By: Aras Pranckevicius, Hans Goudey.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14941
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Also add missing task-ID reference & remove colon after \note as it
doesn't render properly in doxygen.
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New OBJ exporter is missing "Path Mode" setting for exporting .mtl
files. The options that used to be available were: Auto, Absolute,
Relative, Match, Strip Path, Copy. All of them are important. The new
behavior (without any UI option to control it) curiously does not match
any of the previous setting. New behavior is like "Relative, but to the
source blender file, and not the destination export file".
Most of the previous logic was only present in Python based code
(bpy_extras.io_utils.path_reference and friends). The bulk of this
commit is porting that to C++.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14906
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multiple curve types
- Was not exporting "Poly" curves at all,
- Had a crash when a single object contains multiple curves of different types -- it had a check for "is this nurbs compatible?" only for the first curve, and then proceeded to treat the other curves as nurbs as well, without checking for validity.
Fixed both issues by doing the same logic as in the old python exporter:
- Poly curves are supported,
- Treat object as "nurbs compatible" only if all the curves within it are nurbs compatible.
Added test coverage in the gtest suite. While at it, made "all_curves" test use the "golden obj file template" style test, instead of a manually coded test that checks intermediate objects but does not check the final exported result.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14611
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some cases
The new 3.1 OBJ exporter code had incorrect code to determine which vertex group a polygon belongs to -- for each vertex, it was only looking at the first vertex group it has, and not using the group weight either.
This 99% fixes T96824, but not 100% on the user's submitted mesh -- exactly two faces from that mesh get assigned a different group compared to the old exporter. Either choice is "correct" given that on these two faces there are two vertex groups with equal contribution. The old Python exporter was picking the group based on internal python group name map order, whereas the new C++ exporter is picking the group with the lowest index, in case of ties. I'm not sure if it's possible to fix this TBH, will have to wait until the importer is also C++.
While at it, the new vertex group calculation code was doing a lot of redundant work for each and every face (traversing group lists several times, allocating & freeing memory), so I fixed that. Exporting a 6-level subdivided Monkey mesh with 30 vertex groups was taking 810ms, now takes 330ms.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14500
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This commit furthers some of the changes that were started in
rBb9febb54a492 and subsequent commits by changing the way surface
objects are presented to render engines and other users of evaluated
objects in the same way. Instead of presenting evaluated surface objects
as an `OB_SURF` object with an evaluated mesh, `OB_SURF` objects
can now have an evaluated geometry set, which uses the same system
as other object types to deal with multi-type evaluated data.
This clarification makes it more obvious that lots of code that dealt
with the `DispList` type isn't used. It wasn't before either, now it's
just *by design*. Over 1100 lines can be removed. The legacy curve
draw cache code is much simpler now too. The idea behind the further
removal of `DispList` is that it's better to focus optimization efforts
on a single mesh data structure.
One expected functional change is that the evaluated mesh from surface
objects can now be used in geometry nodes with the object info node.
Cycles and the OBJ IO tests had to be tweaked to avoid using evaluated
surface objects instead of the newly exposed mesh objects.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14550
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Original report (T96763) only reported the issue of double-space before the texture path, but while adding test coverage I found some other issues that I fixed while at it:
- Incorrectly emits two spaces between `map_Xx` keyword and the texture path, leading to some 3rd party software not finding the textures,
- Emissive texture map (`map_Ke`) was not exported,
- When Mapping node is used on the texture UVs, the "Location" and "Scale" values were mixed up (location written as "scale", scale written as "location).
Added gtest coverage.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14519
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On Windows/MSVC this gives a minor (~20%) speedup presumably due to a faster float/int formatter. On macOS (Xcode13), this gives a massive speedup, since snprintf that is in system libraries ends up spending almost all the time inside some locale-related mutex lock.
The actual exporter code becomes quite a bit smaller too, since it does not have to do any juggling to support std::string arguments, and the buffer handling code is smaller as well.
Windows (VS2022 release build, Ryzen 5950X 32 threads) timings:
- Blender 3.0 splash scene (2.4GB obj): 4.57s -> 3.86s
- Monkey subdivided level 6 (330MB obj): 1.10s -> 0.99s
macOS (Xcode 13 release build, Apple M1Max) timings:
- Blender 3.0 splash scene (2.4GB obj): 21.03s -> 5.52s
- Monkey subdivided level 6 (330MB obj): 3.28s -> 1.20s
Linux (ThreadRipper 3960X 48 threads) timings:
- Blender 3.0 splash scene (2.4GB obj): 10.10s -> 4.40s
- Monkey subdivided level 6 (330MB obj): 2.16s -> 1.37s
The produced obj/mtl files are identical to before.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey, Dalai Felinto
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13998
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This change makes it possible to add implementation of common
C++ methods for DNA structures which helps ensuring unsafe
operations like shallow copy are done explicitly.
For example, creating a shallow copy used to be:
Object temp_object = *input_object;
In the C++ context it was seen like the temp_object is
properly decoupled from the input object, while in the
reality is it not. Now this code becomes:
Object temp_object = blender::dna::shallow_copy(*input_object);
The copy and move constructor and assignment operators are
now explicitly disabled.
Other than a more explicit resource management this change
also solves a lot of warnings generated by the implicitly
defined copy constructors w.r.t dealing with deprecated fields.
These warnings were generated by Apple Clang when a shallow
object copy was created via implicitly defined copy constructor.
In order to enable C++ methods for DNA structures a newly added
macro `DNA_DEFINE_CXX_METHODS()` is to be used:
tpyedef struct Object {
DNA_DEFINE_CXX_METHODS(Object)
...
} Object;
For the shallow copy use `blender::dna::shallow_copy()`.
The implementation of the memcpy is hidden via an internal DNA
function to avoid pulling `string.h` into every DNA header.
This means that the solution does not affect on the headers
dependencies.
---
Ideally `DNA_shallow_copy` would be defined in a more explicit
header, but don;t think we have a suitable one already. Maybe
we can introduce `DNA_access.h` ?
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14427
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This reverts commit 8c44793228750537c08ea7b19fc18df0138f9501.
Apparently, this generated a lot of warnings in GCC.
Didn't find a quick solution and is it not something I want to be
trading between (more quiet Clang in an expense of less quiet GCC).
Will re-iterate on the patch are re-commit it.
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This change makes it possible to add implementation of common
C++ methods for DNA structures which helps ensuring unsafe
operations like shallow copy are done explicitly.
For example, creating a shallow copy used to be:
Object temp_object = *input_object;
In the C++ context it was seen like the temp_object is
properly decoupled from the input object, while in the
reality is it not. Now this code becomes:
Object temp_object = blender::dna::shallow_copy(*input_object);
The copy and move constructor and assignment operators are
now explicitly disabled.
Other than a more explicit resource management this change
also solves a lot of warnings generated by the implicitly
defined copy constructors w.r.t dealing with deprecated fields.
These warnings were generated by Apple Clang when a shallow
object copy was created via implicitly defined copy constructor.
In order to enable C++ methods for DNA structures a newly added
macro `DNA_DEFINE_CXX_METHODS()` is to be used:
tpyedef struct Object {
DNA_DEFINE_CXX_METHODS(Object)
...
} Object;
For the shallow copy use `blender::dna::shallow_copy()`.
The implementation of the memcpy is hidden via an internal DNA
function to avoid pulling `string.h` into every DNA header.
This means that the solution does not affect on the headers
dependencies.
---
Ideally `DNA_shallow_copy` would be defined in a more explicit
header, but don;t think we have a suitable one already. Maybe
we can introduce `DNA_access.h` ?
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14427
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- Deprecated headers
- Else after return
- Inconsistent parameter names (I used the most recently modified)
- Raw string literals
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Currently there is a "calc_face_normal" argument to mesh to bmesh
conversion, but vertex normals had always implicitly inherited whatever
dirty state the mesh input's vertex normals were in. Probably they were
most often assumed to not be dirty, but this was never really correct in
the general case.
Ever since the refactor to move vertex normals out of mesh vertices,
cfa53e0fbeed7178c7, the copying logic has been explicit: copy the
normals when they are not dirty. But it turns out that more control is
needed, and sometimes normals should be calculated for the resulting
BMesh.
This commit adds an option to the conversion to calculate vertex
normals, true by default. In almost all places except the decimate
and edge split modifiers, I just copied the value of the
"calc_face_normals" argument.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14406
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Related to previous D14368 bug fix, the sorting
operator was not necessarily a stable order sort.
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And wrap tbb::parallel_sort in blender namespace similar to other TBB
functionality.
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Old python exporter in 3.0 and earlier ordered faces by material,
but the new C++ exporter in 3.1+ did not, and was just writing them
in whatever is the order of the mesh data structure.
This mostly does not cause problems, except in some apps e.g.
Procreate -- for large enough meshes, this lack of
"order by material" (which ends up having more usemtl lines)
ends up creating more mesh subsets than necessary inside Procreate.
The change is not computationally heavy, e.g. exporting 6-level
subdivided Monkey mesh goes 1085ms -> 1105ms on my machine.
Reviewed By: @howardt
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14368
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This is patch D14349 from Aras Pranckevicius.
The logic in the code was _completely different_ from the documentation
and what the python exporter in 3.0 did. The new code assumed that
"export material groups" meant "append material name to the object name",
and was only ever kicking in when the "export object groups" option was
also checked. But the proper behavior (as in 3.0 exporter & the online docs),
is to emit g objectname_materialname before each usemtl line. Which is something entirely else.
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This is patch D14347 from Aras Pranckevicius.
Instead of scaling "the scene" (i.e. transform vertices by object matrix,
then multiply by scale factor), it was instead first applying the scale
factor in local space, and then transforming by the object matrix.
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face order for negative scale
This applies patch D14343 from Aras Pranckevicius, with a description:
The new 3.1+ OBJ exporter did not have correct logic when faced with
non-uniform & mirrored (negative on odd number of axes) object scale:
- Normals were not transformed correctly (should use inverse transpose of the matrix),
and were not normalized,
- Face order was not "flipped" when transform has negative scale on odd number of axes
(visible when using "face orientation" viewport overlay).
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This patch, D14303, from Aras Pranckevicius adds presets to the OBJ exporter,
and also adds a checkbox (default on) to apply modifiers before export.
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This commit renames enums related the "Curve" object type and ID type
to add `_LEGACY` to the end. The idea is to make our aspirations clearer
in the code and to avoid ambiguities between `CURVE` and `CURVES`.
Ref T95355
To summarize for the record, the plans are:
- In the short/medium term, replace the `Curve` object data type with
`Curves`
- In the longer term (no immediate plans), use a proper data block for
3D text and surfaces.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14114
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This patch reverses the dependency between `BLI_math_vec_types.hh` and
`BLI_math_vector.hh`. Now the higher level `blender::math` functions
depend on the header that defines the types they work with, rather than
the other way around.
The initial goal was to allow defining an `enable_if` in the types header
and using it in the math header. But I also think this operations to types
dependency is more natural anyway.
This required changing the includes some files used from the type
header to the math implementation header. I took that change a bit
further removing the C vector math header from the C++ header;
I think that helps to make the transition between the two systems
clearer.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14112
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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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Need to only pop diagnostic if it was really pushed.
Pointed out by Aras Pranckevicius, thanks!
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There is no `-Wformat-truncation` warning in Clang, so tweak checks
around diagnostics pragma accordingly.
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Fixes T95384. New exporter was missing a fix for T94516 that recently got applied to the python exporter.
Also changed the obj export tests code so that when save_failing_test_output is requested and MTL result is different from the golden expectation, it is saved as well, similar to how it's done for the OBJ file result.
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This change from Aras further parallelizes wihin large meshes (the previous one
just parallelized over objects).
Some stats: on A Windows machine, AMD Ryzen (32 threads):
(one mesh) Monkey subdivided to level 6: 4.9s -> 1.2s (blender 3.1 was 6.3s; 3.0 was 49.4s).
(one mesh) "Rungholt" minecraft level: 8.5s -> 2.9s (3.1 was 10.5s; 3.0 was 73.7s).
(lots of meshes) Blender 3 splash: 6.2s -> 5.2s (3.1 was 48.9s; 3.0 was 392.3s).
On a Linux machine (Threadripper, 48 threads, writing to SSD):
Monkey - 5.08s -> 1.18s (4.2x speedup)
Rungholt - 9.52s -> 3.22s (2.95x speedup)
Blender 3 splash - 5.91s -> 4.61s (1.28x speedup)
For details see patch D14028.
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Also fixed conflicts due to the change in file writing in the new obj exporter
in master, and fixed one of the tests that was added in master but not 3.1.
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The new wavefront .obj exporter in 3.1 was producing slightly invalid parm line syntax (missing u), and was not setting first/last N params to zeroes and ones for curves with "endpoint" flag properly.
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This is a patch from Aras Pranckevicius, D13927. See that patch for full
details. On Windows, the many small fprintfs were taking up a large amount
of time and significant speedup comes from using snprintf into chained buffers,
and writing them all out later.
On both Windows and Linux, parallelizing the processing by Object can also lead
to a significant increase in speed.
The 3.0 splash screen scene exports 8 times faster than the current C++ exporter
on a Windows machine with 32 threads, and 5.8 times faster on a Linux machine
with 48 threads.
There is admittedly more memory usage for this, but it is still using 25 times
less memory than the old python exporter on the 3.0 splash screen scene, so
this seems an acceptable tradeoff. If use cases come up for exporting obj files
that exceed the memory size of users, a flag could be added to not parallelize
and write the buffers out every so often.
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