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2022-01-23Cleanup: separate function for Alembic edge crease readingKévin Dietrich
2022-01-22Fix T13879 new OBJ exporter not saving files with Unicode characters.Aras Pranckevicius
Need to use BLI_fopen instead of fopen.
2022-01-21Fix new OBJ exporter to handle instancing.Howard Trickey
The new OBJ exporter did not handle object instances. The fix is to use a dependency graph iterator, asking for instances. Unfortunately that iterator makes a temporary copy of instance objects that does not persist past the iteration, but we need to save all the objects and meshes to write later, so the Object has to be copied now. This changed some unit tests. Even though the tests don't have instancing, the iterator also picks up some Text objects as Mesh ones (which is a good thing), resulting in two more objects in the all_objects.obj file output.
2022-01-21.obj: simplify templates in FileHandler, add commentsAnkit Meel
- Remove redundant template from `FormattingSyntax`. - Replace one enable_if with static assert for readability - Add comments No functional change expected. Reviewed by: jacqueslucke Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13882
2022-01-20Subdivision: add support for vertex creasingKévin Dietrich
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
2022-01-20Cleanup: spelling in commentsCampbell Barton
2022-01-20Cleanup: clang-formatCampbell Barton
2022-01-18Fix obj exporter tests by deduping normals and printing with less precision.Howard Trickey
Some new obj exporter tests were disabled because the normals were different in the last decimal place on different platforms. The old python exporter deduped normals with their coordinates rounded to four decimal places. This change does the same in the new exporter. On one test, this produced a file 25% smaller and even ran 10% faster.
2022-01-17Alembic: add support for reading override layersKévin Dietrich
Override layers are a standard feature of Alembic, where archives can override data from other archives, provided that the hierarchies match. This is useful for modifying a UV map, updating an animation, or even creating some sort of LOD system where low resolution meshes are swapped by high resolution versions. It is possible to add UV maps and vertex colors using this system, however, they will only appear in the spreadsheet editor when viewing evaluated data, as the UV map and Vertex color UI only show data present on the original mesh. Implementation wise, this adds a `CacheFileLayer` data structure to the `CacheFile` DNA, as well as some operators and UI to present and manage the layers. For both the Alembic importer and the Cycles procedural, the main change is creating an archive from a list of filepaths, instead of a single one. After importing the base file through the regular import operator, layers can be added to or removed from the `CacheFile` via the UI list under the `Override Layers` panel located in the Mesh Sequence Cache modifier. Layers can also be moved around or hidden. See differential page for tests files and demos. Reviewed by: brecht, sybren Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13603
2022-01-14Disable some failing new obj exporter tests.Howard Trickey
The switch to how normals are kept has led to tiny differences in the normal output values on different platforms. Disabling the failing tests while working on a solution to this problem.
2022-01-13Refactor: Move normals out of MVert, lazy calculationHans Goudey
As described in T91186, this commit moves mesh vertex normals into a contiguous array of float vectors in a custom data layer, how face normals are currently stored. The main interface is documented in `BKE_mesh.h`. Vertex and face normals are now calculated on-demand and cached, retrieved with an "ensure" function. Since the logical state of a mesh is now "has normals when necessary", they can be retrieved from a `const` mesh. The goal is to use on-demand calculation for all derived data, but leave room for eager calculation for performance purposes (modifier evaluation is threaded, but viewport data generation is not). **Benefits** This moves us closer to a SoA approach rather than the current AoS paradigm. Accessing a contiguous `float3` is much more efficient than retrieving data from a larger struct. The memory requirements for accessing only normals or vertex locations are smaller, and at the cost of more memory usage for just normals, they now don't have to be converted between float and short, which also simplifies code In the future, the remaining items can be removed from `MVert`, leaving only `float3`, which has similar benefits (see T93602). Removing the combination of derived and original data makes it conceptually simpler to only calculate normals when necessary. This is especially important now that we have more opportunities for temporary meshes in geometry nodes. **Performance** In addition to the theoretical future performance improvements by making `MVert == float3`, I've done some basic performance testing on this patch directly. The data is fairly rough, but it gives an idea about where things stand generally. - Mesh line primitive 4m Verts: 1.16x faster (36 -> 31 ms), showing that accessing just `MVert` is now more efficient. - Spring Splash Screen: 1.03-1.06 -> 1.06-1.11 FPS, a very slight change that at least shows there is no regression. - Sprite Fright Snail Smoosh: 3.30-3.40 -> 3.42-3.50 FPS, a small but observable speedup. - Set Position Node with Scaled Normal: 1.36x faster (53 -> 39 ms), shows that using normals in geometry nodes is faster. - Normal Calculation 1.6m Vert Cube: 1.19x faster (25 -> 21 ms), shows that calculating normals is slightly faster now. - File Size of 1.6m Vert Cube: 1.03x smaller (214.7 -> 208.4 MB), Normals are not saved in files, which can help with large meshes. As for memory usage, it may be slightly more in some cases, but I didn't observe any difference in the production files I tested. **Tests** Some modifiers and cycles test results need to be updated with this commit, for two reasons: - The subdivision surface modifier is not responsible for calculating normals anymore. In master, the modifier creates different normals than the result of the `Mesh` normal calculation, so this is a bug fix. - There are small differences in the results of some modifiers that use normals because they are not converted to and from `short` anymore. **Future improvements** - Remove `ModifierTypeInfo::dependsOnNormals`. Code in each modifier already retrieves normals if they are needed anyway. - Copy normals as part of a better CoW system for attributes. - Make more areas use lazy instead of eager normal calculation. - Remove `BKE_mesh_normals_tag_dirty` in more places since that is now the default state of a new mesh. - Possibly apply a similar change to derived face corner normals. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12770
2022-01-12Cleanup: codestyle obj_exporter_tests.cc.Jeroen Bakker
2022-01-12Cleanup: Not needed if statement around delete.Jeroen Bakker
2022-01-12BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templatesClément Foucault
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:`float2`) by making heavy usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector classes (inside the `blender::math` namespace) and are not vector size dependent for the most part. In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication. ####Motivations: - We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++. This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were asking for many more code duplication. - Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size. - We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector functions should be static and not in the class namespace. - Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their incompleteness. - The current state of the `BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh` is a bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be static are not (i.e: `float3::reflect()`). ####Upsides: - Still support `.x, .y, .z, .w` for readability. - Compact, readable and easilly extendable. - All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization let us define exception for special class (like mpq). - With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance is the same. ####Downsides: - Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are quite trivial) but by the type conversions. - Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since the usage is not really widespread. - Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length. For instance, one can't call `len_squared_v3v3` in `math::length_squared()` and call it a day. - Type cast does not work with the template version of the `math::` vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast `float *` and `(float *)[3]` to `float3` for the function calls. i.e: `math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);` - Some parts might loose in readability: `float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())` becoming `math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))` But I propose, when appropriate, to use `using namespace blender::math;` on function local or file scope to increase readability. `dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))` ####Consideration: - Include back `.length()` method. It is quite handy and is more C++ oriented. - I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify to our needs. - I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted. - This touches `delaunay_2d.cc` and the intersection code. I would like to know @howardt opinion on the matter. - The `noexcept` on the copy constructor of `mpq(2|3)` is being removed. But according to @JacquesLucke it is not a real problem for now. I would like to give a huge thanks to @JacquesLucke who helped during this and pushed me to reduce the duplication further. Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12Revert "BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates"Clément Foucault
Includes unwanted changes This reverts commit 46e049d0ce2bce2f53ddc41a0dbbea2969d00a5d.
2022-01-12BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templatesClment Foucault
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:`float2`) by making heavy usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector classes (inside the `blender::math` namespace) and are not vector size dependent for the most part. In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication. ####Motivations: - We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++. This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were asking for many more code duplication. - Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size. - We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector functions should be static and not in the class namespace. - Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their incompleteness. - The current state of the `BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh` is a bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be static are not (i.e: `float3::reflect()`). ####Upsides: - Still support `.x, .y, .z, .w` for readability. - Compact, readable and easilly extendable. - All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization let us define exception for special class (like mpq). - With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance is the same. ####Downsides: - Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are quite trivial) but by the type conversions. - Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since the usage is not really widespread. - Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length. For instance, one can't call `len_squared_v3v3` in `math::length_squared()` and call it a day. - Type cast does not work with the template version of the `math::` vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast `float *` and `(float *)[3]` to `float3` for the function calls. i.e: `math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]);` - Some parts might loose in readability: `float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized())` becoming `math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2))` But I propose, when appropriate, to use `using namespace blender::math;` on function local or file scope to increase readability. `dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2))` ####Consideration: - Include back `.length()` method. It is quite handy and is more C++ oriented. - I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify to our needs. - I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted. - This touches `delaunay_2d.cc` and the intersection code. I would like to know @howardt opinion on the matter. - The `noexcept` on the copy constructor of `mpq(2|3)` is being removed. But according to @JacquesLucke it is not a real problem for now. I would like to give a huge thanks to @JacquesLucke who helped during this and pushed me to reduce the duplication further. Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12Revert "BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templates"Clément Foucault
Reverted because the commit removes a lot of commits. This reverts commit a2c1c368af48644fa8995ecbe7138cc0d7900c30.
2022-01-12BLI: Refactor vector types & functions to use templatesClément Foucault
This patch implements the vector types (i.e:float2) by making heavy usage of templating. All vector functions are now outside of the vector classes (inside the blender::math namespace) and are not vector size dependent for the most part. In the ongoing effort to make shaders less GL centric, we are aiming to share more code between GLSL and C++ to avoid code duplication. Motivations: - We are aiming to share UBO and SSBO structures between GLSL and C++. This means we will use many of the existing vector types and others we currently don't have (uintX, intX). All these variations were asking for many more code duplication. - Deduplicate existing code which is duplicated for each vector size. - We also want to share small functions. Which means that vector functions should be static and not in the class namespace. - Reduce friction to use these types in new projects due to their incompleteness. - The current state of the BLI_(float|double|mpq)(2|3|4).hh is a bit of a let down. Most clases are incomplete, out of sync with each others with different codestyles, and some functions that should be static are not (i.e: float3::reflect()). Upsides: - Still support .x, .y, .z, .w for readability. - Compact, readable and easilly extendable. - All of the vector functions are available for all the vectors types and can be restricted to certain types. Also template specialization let us define exception for special class (like mpq). - With optimization ON, the compiler unroll the loops and performance is the same. Downsides: - Might impact debugability. Though I would arge that the bugs are rarelly caused by the vector class itself (since the operations are quite trivial) but by the type conversions. - Might impact compile time. I did not saw a significant impact since the usage is not really widespread. - Functions needs to be rewritten to support arbitrary vector length. For instance, one can't call len_squared_v3v3 in math::length_squared() and call it a day. - Type cast does not work with the template version of the math:: vector functions. Meaning you need to manually cast float * and (float *)[3] to float3 for the function calls. i.e: math::distance_squared(float3(nearest.co), positions[i]); - Some parts might loose in readability: float3::dot(v1.normalized(), v2.normalized()) becoming math::dot(math::normalize(v1), math::normalize(v2)) But I propose, when appropriate, to use using namespace blender::math; on function local or file scope to increase readability. dot(normalize(v1), normalize(v2)) Consideration: - Include back .length() method. It is quite handy and is more C++ oriented. - I considered the GLM library as a candidate for replacement. It felt like too much for what we need and would be difficult to extend / modify to our needs. - I used Macros to reduce code in operators declaration and potential copy paste bugs. This could reduce debugability and could be reverted. - This touches delaunay_2d.cc and the intersection code. I would like to know @Howard Trickey (howardt) opinion on the matter. - The noexcept on the copy constructor of mpq(2|3) is being removed. But according to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) it is not a real problem for now. I would like to give a huge thanks to @Jacques Lucke (JacquesLucke) who helped during this and pushed me to reduce the duplication further. Reviewed By: brecht, sergey, JacquesLucke Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D13791
2022-01-12Cleanup: use utility functionsKévin Dietrich
2022-01-12Cleanup: Fix build warning with MSVCRay Molenkamp
comparing a bool > 0 make MSVC emit warning C4804: '>': unsafe use of type 'bool' in operation. int does the job nicely.
2022-01-11Cleanup: quite missing-variable-declarations warningsCampbell Barton
2022-01-08Fix T94713: Alembic crash with empty frames and velocitiesKévin Dietrich
Some software or processing tools (videogrammetry in this case) may export malformed files with velocity data even when the frame is empty for some reason. We need to explicity compare the data size with the vertex size, and refuse to load the attribute if there is a data size mismatch.
2022-01-07Cleanup: use the ELEM macroCampbell Barton
2022-01-07Cleanup: remove redundant const qualifiers for POD typesCampbell Barton
MSVC used to warn about const mismatch for arguments passed by value. Remove these as newer versions of MSVC no longer show this warning.
2022-01-06Cleanup: typos in code.Kévin Dietrich
2022-01-06Fix T94674: crash reading ORCOs from an Alembic animationKévin Dietrich
The crash is caused as the data is only for the first frame, but the mesh changes topology, so reading the data in subsequent frames causes a buffer overflow. To fix this, we check that the data size matches the mesh's vertex count.
2022-01-06Cleanup: USD/ABC, remove `const` from pass-by-value paramsSybren A. Stüvel
Remove `const` from pass-by-value parameters in function declarations. The variables passed as parameters can never be modified by the function anyway, so declaring them as `const` is meaningless. Having the declaration there could confuse, especially as it suggests it does have a meaning, training people to write meaningless code.
2022-01-06Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headersCampbell Barton
Some recent changes re-introduced public-style doc-strings in the source file.
2022-01-06Cleanup: sort cmake file listsCampbell Barton
2022-01-06Cleanup: spelling in commentsCampbell Barton
2022-01-06In obj exporter test, fix a strncpy length and a stray test file left behind.Howard Trickey
2022-01-03Add a new C++ version of an exporter for the Wavefront .obj format.Howard Trickey
This was originally written by Ankit Meel as a GSoC 2020 project. Howard Trickey added some tests and made some corrections/modifications. See D13046 for more details. This commit inserts a new menu item into the export menu called "Wavefront OBJ (.obj) - New". For now the old Python exporter remains in the menu, along with the Python importer, but we plan to remove it soon (leaving the old addon bundled with Blender but not enabled by default).
2021-12-25Cleanup: use new c++ guarded allocator APIAaron Carlisle
API added in rBa3ad5abf2fe85d623f9e78fefc34e27bdc14632e
2021-12-21Cleanup: Clang tidy, restore alphabetical sortingHans Goudey
2021-12-21Nodes: refactor node tree update handlingJacques Lucke
Goals of this refactor: * More unified approach to updating everything that needs to be updated after a change in a node tree. * The updates should happen in the correct order and quadratic or worse algorithms should be avoided. * Improve detection of changes to the output to avoid tagging the depsgraph when it's not necessary. * Move towards a more declarative style of defining nodes by having a more centralized update procedure. The refactor consists of two main parts: * Node tree tagging and update refactor. * Generally, when changes are done to a node tree, it is tagged dirty until a global update function is called that updates everything in the correct order. * The tagging is more fine-grained compared to before, to allow for more precise depsgraph update tagging. * Depsgraph changes. * The shading specific depsgraph node for node trees as been removed. * Instead, there is a new `NTREE_OUTPUT` depsgrap node, which is only tagged when the output of the node tree changed (e.g. the Group Output or Material Output node). * The copy-on-write relation from node trees to the data block they are embedded in is now non-flushing. This avoids e.g. triggering a material update after the shader node tree changed in unrelated ways. Instead the material has a flushing relation to the new `NTREE_OUTPUT` node now. * The depsgraph no longer reports data block changes through to cycles through `Depsgraph.updates` when only the node tree changed in ways that do not affect the output. Avoiding unnecessary updates seems to work well for geometry nodes and cycles. The situation is a bit worse when there are drivers on the node tree, but that could potentially be improved separately in the future. Avoiding updates in eevee and the compositor is more tricky, but also less urgent. * Eevee updates are triggered by calling `DRW_notify_view_update` in `ED_render_view3d_update` indirectly from `DEG_editors_update`. * Compositor updates are triggered by `ED_node_composite_job` in `node_area_refresh`. This is triggered by calling `ED_area_tag_refresh` in `node_area_listener`. Removing updates always has the risk of breaking some dependency that no one was aware of. It's not unlikely that this will happen here as well. Adding back missing updates should be quite a bit easier than getting rid of unnecessary updates though. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13246
2021-12-13Cleanup: use "filepath" term for Main, BlendFileData & FileGlobalCampbell Barton
Use "filepath" which is the current convention for naming full paths. - Main use "name" which isn't obviously a file path. - BlendFileData & FileGlobal used "filename" which is often used for the name component of a path (without the directory).
2021-12-10Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for various API'sCampbell Barton
Some doc-strings were skipped because of blank-lines between the doc-string and the symbol and needed to be moved manually. - 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. Ref T92709
2021-12-10Cleanup: spelling in commentsCampbell Barton
2021-12-09Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'io/usd'Campbell Barton
Ref T92709
2021-12-09Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'io/alembic'Campbell Barton
Ref T92709
2021-12-09Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'io/collada'Campbell Barton
Ref T92709
2021-12-09Cleanup: move public doc-strings into headers for 'io/gpencil'Campbell Barton
Ref T92709
2021-12-08Cleanup: Silence clang-tidy warnings.Jeroen Bakker
2021-12-08Cleanup: Clang-Tidy modernize-redundant-void-argAaron Carlisle
2021-12-02Cleanup: spelling in commentsCampbell Barton
2021-12-02Cleanup: FIx build with USD after recent refactorAaron Carlisle
rB218360a89217f4e8321319035bf4d9ff97fb2658 missed a couple renames in USD code paths.
2021-12-01Fix T92561: unstable particle distribution with Alembic filesKévin Dietrich
When enabling or disabling a Mesh Sequence Cache modifier of an Object with a hair particle system, the hair would switch positions. This is caused because original coordinates in Blender are expected to be normalized, and toggling the modifier would cause the usage of different orco layers: one that is normalized, and the other which isn't. This bug exposes a few related issues: - if the Alembic file did not have orco data, `MOD_deform_mesh_eval_get`, used by the particle system modifier, would add an orco layer without normalization - `MOD_deform_mesh_eval_get` would also ignore the presence of an orco layer (e.g. one that could have been read from Alembic) - if the Alembic file did have orco data, the data would be read unnormalized To fix those various issues, original coordinates are normalized when read from Alembic and unnormalized when written to Alembic; and a new utility function `BKE_mesh_orco_ensure` is added to add a normalized orco layer if none exists on the mesh already, this function derives from the code used in the particle system. Reviewed By: brecht Maniphest Tasks: T92561 Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13306
2021-11-19Cleanup: fix typos in comments and docsBrecht Van Lommel
Contributed by luzpaz. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13264
2021-11-16Merge branch 'blender-v3.0-release'Philipp Oeser
2021-11-16Fix T93066: Alembic export ignores Mantaflow particlesPhilipp Oeser
`ABCPointsWriter::is_supported` already checked for valid particle system types (liquid, spray, foam, bubbles, ...). `AbstractHierarchyIterator::make_writers_particle_systems` did not create a writer for these though, so now bring these in line and also create writers for these.