This replaces the Sheen model used in the Principled BSDF with the
model from #108869 that is already used in the Sheen BSDF now.
The three notable differences are:
- At full intensity (Sheen = 1.0), the new model is significantly
stronger than the old one. For existing files, the intensity is
adjusted to keep the overall look similar.
- The Sheen Tint input is now a color input, instead of the
previous blend factor between white and the base color.
- There is now a Sheen roughness control, which can be used to
tweak the look between velvet-like and dust-like.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109949
This was already unsupported in combination with Multiscattering GGX,
prevented the Principled BSDF from using microfaced-based Fresnel for
Glass materials, and would have made future improvements even trickier.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109950
Previously the normal strength linearly interpolated and extrapolated
the normal in world space. Instead do it in tangent space, in a way
that ensure the normal remains above the surface and valid.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109763
The Voronoi distance output is clamped at 8, which is apparent for distance
metrics like Minkowski with low exponents.
This patch fixes that by setting the initial distance of the search loop to
FLT_MAX instead of 8. And for the Smooth variant of F1, the "h" parameter is set
to 1 for the first iteration using a signal value, effectively ignoring the
initial distance and using the computed distance at the first iteration instead.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109286
The Voronoi Smooth F1 mode breaks when the Smoothness is 0 for OSL. This is
due to a zero division in the shader.
To fix this, standard F1 is used when Smoothness is 0.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109255
Fractal noise is the idea of evaluating the same noise function multiple times with
different input parameters on each layer and then mixing the results. The individual
layers are usually called octaves.
The number of layers is controlled with a "Detail" slider.
The "Lacunarity" input controls a factor by which each successive layer gets scaled.
The existing Noise node already supports fractal noise. Now the Voronoi Noise node
supports it as well. The node also has a new "Normalize" property that ensures that
the output values stay in a [0.0, 1.0] range. That is except for the F2 feature where
in rare cases the output may be outside that range even with "Normalize" turned on.
How the individual octaves are mixed depends on the feature and output socket:
- F1/Smooth F1/F2:
- Distance/Color output:
The individual Distance/Color octaves are first multiplied by a factor of
`Roughness ^ (#layers - 1.0)` then added together to create the final output.
- Position output:
Each Position octave gets linearly interpolated with the combined output of the
previous octaves. The Roughness input serves as an interpolation factor with
0.0 resutling in only using the combined output of the previous octaves and
1.0 resulting in only using the current highest octave.
- Distance to Edge:
- Distance output:
The Distance octaves are mixed exactly like the Position octaves for F1/Smooth F1/F2.
It should be noted that Voronoi Noise is a relatively slow noise function, especially
at higher dimensions. Increasing the "Detail" makes it even slower. Therefore, when
optimizing a scene one should consider trying to use simpler noise functions instead
of Voronoi if the final result is close enough.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/106827
Used to be https://archive.blender.org/developer/D17123.
Internally these are already using the same code path anyways, there's no point in maintaining two distinct nodes.
The obvious approach would be to add Anisotropy controls to the Glossy BSDF node and remove the Anisotropic BSDF node. However, that would break forward compability, since older Blender versions don't know how to handle the Anisotropy input on the Glossy BSDF node.
Therefore, this commit technically removes the Glossy BSDF node, uses versioning to replace them with an Anisotropic BSDF node, and renames that node to "Glossy BSDF".
That way, when you open a new file in an older version, all the nodes show up as Anisotropic BSDF nodes and render correctly.
This is a bit ugly internally since we need to preserve the old `idname` which now no longer matches the UI name, but that's not too bad.
Also removes the "Sharp" distribution option and replaces it with GGX, sets Roughness to zero and disconnects any input to the Roughness socket.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/104445
This patch implements the bicubic interpolation option in the transform
nodes. The path merely reuse the code in the shader image texture and
adds bicubic variants to the domain realization shader.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105533
Avoid computing the non-derivative height twice.
The height is now computed as part of the main function, while the height at x and y offsets are still computed on a separate function.
The differentials are now computed directly at node_bump.
Co-authored-by: Miguel Pozo <pragma37@gmail.com>
Pull Request #104595
Expands Color Mix nodes with new Exclusion mode.
Similar to Difference but produces less contrast.
Requested by Pierre Schiller @3D_director and
@OmarSquircleArt on twitter.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16543
The attribute node already allows accessing attributes associated
with objects and meshes, which allows changing the behavior of the
same material between different objects or instances. The same idea
can be extended to an even more global level of layers and scenes.
Currently view layers provide an option to replace all materials
with a different one. However, since the same material will be applied
to all objects in the layer, varying the behavior between layers while
preserving distinct materials requires duplicating objects.
Providing access to properties of layers and scenes via the attribute
node enables making materials with built-in switches or settings that
can be controlled globally at the view layer level. This is probably
most useful for complex NPR shading and compositing. Like with objects,
the node can also access built-in scene properties, like render resolution
or FOV of the active camera. Lookup is also attempted in World, similar
to how the Object mode checks the Mesh datablock.
In Cycles this mode is implemented by replacing the attribute node with
the attribute value during sync, allowing constant folding to take the
values into account. This means however that materials that use this
feature have to be re-synced upon any changes to scene, world or camera.
The Eevee version uses a new uniform buffer containing a sorted array
mapping name hashes to values, with binary search lookup. The array
is limited to 512 entries, which is effectively limitless even
considering it is shared by all materials in the scene; it is also
just 16KB of memory so no point trying to optimize further.
The buffer has to be rebuilt when new attributes are detected in a
material, so the draw engine keeps a table of recently seen attribute
names to minimize the chance of extra rebuilds mid-draw.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15941
Sun Disc is currently not supported because it'll need special handling - on the one hand, I'm not sure if Eevee would handle a 1e6 coming out of a background shader without issues, and on the other hand it won't actually cast sharp shadows anyways.
I guess we'd want to internally add a sun to the lamps if Sun Disc is enabled, but getting that right is tricky since the user could e.g. swap RGB channels in the node tree and the lamp wouldn't match that.
Anyways, that can be handled later, the sky itself is already a start.
Reviewed By: fclem
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13522
The new code was not using the correct default attribute. Add access to
`g_data.P` through `node_tex_coord_position()` to replace the old
`GPU_builtin(GPU_VIEW_POSITION)` which was used before.
Reviewed By: jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15862
This replaces the direct shader uniform layout declaration by a linear
search through a global buffer.
Each instance has an attribute offset inside the global buffer and an
attribute count.
This removes any padding and tighly pack all uniform attributes inside
a single buffer.
This would also remove the limit of 8 attribute but it is kept because of
compatibility with the old system that is still used by the old draw
manager.
This was an oversight as the matrix multiplication present in original
code was reversed.
Reviewed By: jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15858
This was caused by un-wanted normalization. This is a requirement of
the MikkTspace. The issue is that g_data.N is expected to be normalized
by many other functions and overriden by bump displacement.
Adding a new global variable containing the interpolated normal fixes the
issue AND make it match cycles behavior better (mix between bump and
interpolated normal).
Workaround the issue by adding an intermediate function. This is usually
the case when working with attributes.
Reviewed By: jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15860
This particular GPU driver does not constant fold all the way in order
to discard the unused branches.
To workaround that, we introduce a series of material flag that generates
defines that only keep used branches.
Reviewed By: jbakker
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15852
This patch is a response to T92588 and is implemented
as a Function/Shader node.
This node has support for Float, Vector and Color data types.
For Vector it supports uniform and non-uniform mixing.
For Color it now has the option to remove factor clamping.
It replaces the Mix RGB for Shader and Geometry node trees.
As discussed in T96219, this patch converts existing nodes
in .blend files. The old node is still available in the
Python API but hidden from the menus.
Reviewed By: HooglyBoogly, JacquesLucke, simonthommes, brecht
Maniphest Tasks: T92588
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13749
The calculation was revised to address two issues:
* Discontinuities occurring when detail was a non-integer greater than 2.
* Levels of detail in the interval [0,1) repeating the levels of detail in
the interval [1,2).
This fixes Cycles, Eevee and geometry nodes.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15785
Since the occlusion input is going to be removed in EEVEE-Next, I just
added a temporary workaround. The occlusion is passed as SSS radius
as the Specular BSDF does not use it.
The final result matches 3.1 release
* Port over new code tables from Cycles
* Convert Rec.709 to scene linear for lookup table.
* Move code for wavelength and blackbody to IMB so they can access the
required transforms, which are not in blenlib.
* Remove clamping from blackbody shader to bypass the texture read.
Since it's variable now easiest to just always read from the texture
than pass additional parameters.
* Fold XYZ to RGB conversion into the wavelength table.
Ref T68926
Introduced by {35594f4b92fa4cbb5b848f447b7a3323e572b676}.
Some platforms do not support temp variables to be used as inout parameter.
Detected on Mac with Intel iGPU.
This was caused by the `Closure` members being added to the final contribution
more than once. The workaround is to clear the members once a closure has
been added to the final contribution. I used `inout` on `Closure` inputs
so that the render engine implementation of mix and add closure nodes
can do its own thing. The nodegraph handling of inout was changed for this
to work.
Curve tangent was correctly mistaken with curve normal.
This patch fixes the name of the output in the glsl function and make curve
attributes more explicit (with `curve_` prefix).
This also improve the normal computation by making it per pixel to match
cycles.
Also ports the changes to eevee-next.
This patches rewrites the GPU shaders of curve nodes for easier future
development. This is a non-functional change. The new code avoids code
duplication by moving common code into BKE curve mapping functions. It
also avoids ambiguous data embedding into the gradient vectors that are
passed to vectors and reduces the size of uniforms uploaded to the
shader by avoiding redundancies.
This is needed in preparation for the viewport compositor, which will
utilize and extend this implementation.
Reviewed By: fclem
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14689
This patch moves some of the utility library shaders into a common
directory and makes the necessary renames across shaders. Additionally,
material-specific transform functions were moved outside of math utils
into a separate transform_utils.glsl file.
This is needed in preparation for the viewport compositor, which will
make use of some of those utilities and will require all material
specific bit to be removed out of those files.
Reviewed By: fclem
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14688