Welcome to mirror list, hosted at ThFree Co, Russian Federation.

git.blender.org/blender.git - Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
AgeCommit message (Collapse)Author
2022-11-08Fix T102003: Spline parameter length wrong for NURBSHans Goudey
The node has always be a bit confusing for the NURBS case, since it uses the distance between control points since the evaluated/control point mapping isn't obvious, but it also went above 1, which wasn't correct. Instead, retrieve the total length from the point lengths calculated in the previous step. The results should be the same for other curve types.
2022-10-04Cleanup: replace UNUSED macro with commented args in C++ codeHans Goudey
This is the conventional way of dealing with unused arguments in C++, since it works on all compilers. Regex find and replace: `UNUSED\((\w+)\)` -> `/*$1*/`
2022-09-29Fix: Spline Parameter node produces NaN when curve is a single pointJacques Lucke
Issue found in file from T101256.
2022-09-28Geometry Nodes: viewport previewJacques Lucke
This adds support for showing geometry passed to the Viewer in the 3d viewport (instead of just in the spreadsheet). The "viewer geometry" bypasses the group output. So it is not necessary to change the final output of the node group to be able to see the intermediate geometry. **Activation and deactivation of a viewer node** * A viewer node is activated by clicking on it. * Ctrl+shift+click on any node/socket connects it to the viewer and makes it active. * Ctrl+shift+click in empty space deactivates the active viewer. * When the active viewer is not visible anymore (e.g. another object is selected, or the current node group is exit), it is deactivated. * Clicking on the icon in the header of the Viewer node toggles whether its active or not. **Pinning** * The spreadsheet still allows pinning the active viewer as before. When pinned, the spreadsheet still references the viewer node even when it becomes inactive. * The viewport does not support pinning at the moment. It always shows the active viewer. **Attribute** * When a field is linked to the second input of the viewer node it is displayed as an overlay in the viewport. * When possible the correct domain for the attribute is determined automatically. This does not work in all cases. It falls back to the face corner domain on meshes and the point domain on curves. When necessary, the domain can be picked manually. * The spreadsheet now only shows the "Viewer" column for the domain that is selected in the Viewer node. * Instance attributes are visualized as a constant color per instance. **Viewport Options** * The attribute overlay opacity can be controlled with the "Viewer Node" setting in the overlays popover. * A viewport can be configured not to show intermediate viewer-geometry by disabling the "Viewer Node" option in the "View" menu. **Implementation Details** * The "spreadsheet context path" was generalized to a "viewer path" that is used in more places now. * The viewer node itself determines the attribute domain, evaluates the field and stores the result in a `.viewer` attribute. * A new "viewer attribute' overlay displays the data from the `.viewer` attribute. * The ground truth for the active viewer node is stored in the workspace now. Node editors, spreadsheets and viewports retrieve the active viewer from there unless they are pinned. * The depsgraph object iterator has a new "viewer path" setting. When set, the viewed geometry of the corresponding object is part of the iterator instead of the final evaluated geometry. * To support the instance attribute overlay `DupliObject` was extended to contain the information necessary for drawing the overlay. * The ctrl+shift+click operator has been refactored so that it can make existing links to viewers active again. * The auto-domain-detection in the Viewer node works by checking the "preferred domain" for every field input. If there is not exactly one preferred domain, the fallback is used. Known limitations: * Loose edges of meshes don't have the attribute overlay. This could be added separately if necessary. * Some attributes are hard to visualize as a color directly. For example, the values might have to be normalized or some should be drawn as arrays. For now, we encourage users to build node groups that generate appropriate viewer-geometry. We might include some of that functionality in future versions. Support for displaying attribute values as text in the viewport is planned as well. * There seems to be an issue with the attribute overlay for pointclouds on nvidia gpus, to be investigated. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15954
2022-08-30Geometry Nodes: Use separate field context for each geometry typeHans Goudey
Using the same `GeometryComponentFieldContext` for all situations, even when only one geometry type is supported is misleading, and mixes too many different abstraction levels into code that could be simpler. With the attribute API moved out of geometry components recently, the "component" system is just getting in the way here. This commit adds specific field contexts for geometry types: meshes, curves, point clouds, and instances. There are also separate field input helper classes, to help reduce boilerplate for fields that only support specific geometry types. Another benefit of this change is that it separates geometry components from fields, which makes it easier to see the purpose of the two concepts, and how they relate. Because we want to be able to evaluate a field on just `CurvesGeometry` rather than the full `Curves` data-block, the generic "geometry context" had to be changed to avoid using `GeometryComponent`, since there is no corresponding geometry component type. The resulting void pointer is ugly, but only turns up in three places in practice. When Apple clang supports `std::variant`, that could be used instead. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15519
2022-08-22Fix T100258: wrong spline length used in Spline Parameter nodeIliya Katueshenock
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15705
2022-06-24Fix T99130: Spline factor gets messed up if one hair is too shortDalai Felinto
In the cases where length is zero, we simply equally distribute the value based on the control point/curve index. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15285
2022-06-08Fix: incorrect curve parameter for catmull rom curvesJacques Lucke
2022-06-01Cleanup: use 'e' prefix for enum typesCampbell Barton
- CustomDataType -> eCustomDataType - CustomDataMask -> eCustomDataMask - AttributeDomain -> eAttrDomain - NamedAttributeUsage -> eNamedAttrUsage
2022-05-11Fix: Spline parameter node broken for Catmull Rom curvesHans Goudey
Subtracting one from the evaluated index could make the index -1. That was only necessary for Bezier curves due to the specifics of the "bezier_evaluated_offsets".
2022-05-05Cleanup: Further clarification and renaming of curve field inputsHans Goudey
Differentiate the total length of curves and the accumulated length at each control point.
2022-04-09Fix: Various fixes and cleanups in new curves codeHans Goudey
- Use "curve" instead of "spline" in comments - Use non-plural variable names - Tag topology dirty after resolution modified rather than positions - Reorder enum values to change which value is zero (and the default) - Remove a duplicate unused variable
2022-04-07Fix: Curve parameter node broken for Bezier curves after refactorHans Goudey
The last length value was not initialized, and all length values were moved one position towards the front of each curve incorrectly. Also fix an assert when a curve only had a single point.
2022-03-31Cleanup: spelling, trailing space for comment-blocksCampbell Barton
2022-03-30Curves: Port parameter node to the new data-blockHans Goudey
Using the evaluated lengths cache from 72d25fa41d8c575, re-implement the curve parameter node with the new data structure. Conceptually it works the same way, but the code is restructured and cleaned up a bit as well. This also adds support for Catmull Rom curves. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14461
2022-02-28Geometry Nodes: Begin conversion to new curvesHans Goudey
This commit changes `CurveComponent` to store the new curve type by adding conversions to and from `CurveEval` in most nodes. This will temporarily make performance of curves in geometry nodes much worse, but as functionality is implemented for the new type and it is used in more places, performance will become better than before. We still use `CurveEval` for drawing curves, because the new `Curves` data-block has no evaluated points yet. So the `Curve` ID is still generated for rendering in the same way as before. It's also still needed for drawing curve object edit mode overlays. The old curve component isn't removed yet, because it is still used to implement the conversions to and from `CurveEval`. A few more attributes are added to make this possible: - `nurbs_weight`: The weight for each control point on NURBS curves. - `nurbs_order`: The order of the NURBS curve - `knots_mode`: Necessary for conversion, not defined yet. - `handle_type_{left/right}`: An 8 bit integer attribute. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14145
2022-02-23Fix: Errors in previous cleanup commitHans Goudey
f3ef0763b41155e623 introduced a file by mistake, and didn't add a new enum type to many switch cases. Sorry for the noise.
2022-02-23Cleanup: Use new curves type enum for CurveEvalHans Goudey
Though this is less aesthetically pleasing, it makes the transition to the new curves type (T95941) a bit simpler, and it has to be done anyway.
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
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
2022-01-04Cleanup: Remove bNodeType flag from base registration functionsAaron Carlisle
This flag is only used a few small cases, so instead of setting the flag for every node only set the required flag for the nodes that require it. Mostly the flag is used to set `ntype.flag = NODE_PREVIEW` For nodes that should have previews by default which is only some compositor nodes and some texture nodes. The frame node also sets the `NODE_BACKGROUND` flag. All other nodes were setting a flag of 0 which has no purpose. Reviewed By: JacquesLucke Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13699
2021-12-06Geometry Nodes: reduce code duplication with new GeometyrFieldInputJacques Lucke
Most of our field inputs are currently specific to geometry. This patch introduces a new `GeometryFieldInput` that reduces the overhead of adding new geometry field input. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13489
2021-11-30Geometry Nodes: Rename Curve Parameter, Add Index on SplineJohnny Matthews
- Rename the Curve Parameter node to Spline Parameter. - Add "Index on Spline" to the node. This output is the index of the current point on it's parent spline rather than the entrire curve. Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13275