When debugging with gdb in vscode, the stuff I print when executing a script in
the text editor does not show up in the terminal. It does work when I flush
explicitly though using `print(..., flush=True)`. This is quite annoying.
The solution is to always flush `stdout` and `stderr` automatically when running
a script. This is done using the CPython API, as just using
`fflush(stdout/stderr)` did not solve the issue.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/136632
In Geometry Nodes a geometry is represented by a `GeometrySet`. This is a
container that can contain one geometry of each of the supported types (mesh,
curves, volume, grease pencil, pointcloud, instances). It's possible for a
`GeometrySet` to contain e.g. a mesh and a point cloud.
This patch creates a Python wrapper for the built-in `GeometrySet`. For now,
it's main purpose is to consume the complete evaluated geometry of an object
without having to go through complex hoops via `depsgraph.object_instances`. It
also also allows retrieving instances that have been created with legacy
instancing systems such as dupli-verts or particles.
In the future, the `GeometrySet` API could also be used for more kinds of
geometry processing from Python, similar to how we use `GeometrySet` internally
as generic geometry storage.
Since we can't really have constness guarantees in Python currently, it's
enforced that the `GeometrySet` wrapper always has its own copy of each geometry
type (so e.g. it does not share a `Mesh` data-block pointer with any other place
in Blender). Without the copy, changes to the mesh in the geometry set would
also affect the evaluated geometry that Blender sees. The copy has a small cost,
but typically the overhead should be low, because attributes and other run-time
data can still be shared. This should be entirely thread-safe, assuming that no
code modifies implicitly shared data, which is forbidden. For historic reasons
there are still cases like #132423 where this assumption does not hold in all
cases. Those cases should be fixed. To my knowledge, this patch does not
introduce any new such issues or makes existing issues worse.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/135318
While using constructors in Operator classes is _really_ not
recommended, BPY code was a bit too eager to overwrite existing errors
with its own generic messages.
Now only generate these exceptions if there is no other exception
already set.
- Manually check over all direct calls to operator callbacks
ensuring the result isn't assigned to an int.
- OPERATOR_RETVAL_CHECK() now fails unless a wmOperatorStatus is used.
- Check the return values of direct calls to callbacks.
- Remove invalid check for the return value of rna_operator_check_cb.
- Use the variable name `retval` as it's most widely used.
- Move the assignment of `retval` out of the `if` statement in
sculpt/paint operators because it prevents assigning the result
`const` variable.
Add support for using BLF to draw into an ImBuf image buffer.
Once the imbuf context has been set, draw calls for that font_id will draw into the image.
This works by binding an imbuf to BLF which is then used as the target when drawing.
```
with blf.bind_imbuf(font_id, imbuf):
blf.draw_buffer(font_id, text)
```
See the example in the Python API documentation for reference.
The following BLF API's have been added to support a Python context manager.
- `BLF_buffer_state_push`.
- `BLF_buffer_state_pop`
- `BLF_buffer_state_free`
Ref !135772
The main issue of 'type-less' standard C allocations is that there is no check on
allocated type possible.
This is a serious source of annoyance (and crashes) when making some
low-level structs non-trivial, as tracking down all usages of these
structs in higher-level other structs and their allocation is... really
painful.
MEM_[cm]allocN<T> templates on the other hand do check that the
given type is trivial, at build time (static assert), which makes such issue...
trivial to catch.
NOTE: New code should strive to use MEM_new (i.e. allocation and
construction) as much as possible, even for trivial PoD types.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/135852
When adding the assert I thought this wasn't happening on Linux
(since I'm unable to redo it locally).
However the builtbot hits this assert on Linux, causing tests to fail.
Resolves#135195
The general idea is to keep the 'old', C-style MEM_callocN signature, and slowly
replace most of its usages with the new, C++-style type-safer template version.
* `MEM_cnew<T>` allocation version is renamed to `MEM_callocN<T>`.
* `MEM_cnew_array<T>` allocation version is renamed to `MEM_calloc_arrayN<T>`.
* `MEM_cnew<T>` duplicate version is renamed to `MEM_dupallocN<T>`.
Similar templates type-safe version of `MEM_mallocN` will be added soon
as well.
Following discussions in !134452.
NOTE: For now static type checking in `MEM_callocN` and related are slightly
different for Windows MSVC. This compiler seems to consider structs using the
`DNA_DEFINE_CXX_METHODS` macro as non-trivial (likely because their default
copy constructors are deleted). So using checks on trivially
constructible/destructible instead on this compiler/system.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/134771
This reverts commit
48abc7aabc &
62599317dd.
Revert !126755 as it was only meant to impact document generation
but it infact made functional changes, see: !135352.
The code-path for coercing a dictionary to operator/gizmo properties
was being used RNA functions where it's not supported.
Raise a type exception instead of crashing.
When called on an object that you cannot get a mesh from (e.g. Empties),
you would run into an unhelpful "SystemError: <built-in method
FromObject of type object at ...> returned NULL without setting an
exception"
Now be more specific in the error message.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/135162
Add `PointerRNA::reset()` and `PointerRNA::invalidate()` utils functions
(both simply reset the PointerRNA data to empty state).
Replace `RNA_POINTER_INVALIDATE` macro by `PointerRNA::invalidate()`.
Follow-up to !134393 and e55d478c64.
Fixed use of lists using multiple arguments - `list` only
support a single argument.
Noticed working with fake-bpy-module - providing multiple
arguments to `list` resulted in typing error (e.g. "Too many type
arguments provided for "list"; expected 1 but received 2").
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/134663
Reading & restoring RNA "writable" state wasn't working reliably when
Python was called from multiple threads.
- Resolve by acquiring the GIL before calling `pyrna_write_*` functions.
- Assert `pyrna_write_*` has the GIL to prevent this happening again.
- Move duplicate checks from bpy_props.cc into utility functions.