The converter is an abstraction that takes a base mesh to be subdivided
and provides its topology information to the OpenSubdiv library. It does
this with one level of indirection: first extracting the base mesh
topology with a virtual function call per element to local arrays,
then giving the information in those arrays to OpenSubdiv.
That level of indirection also handles cache invalidation for the
intermediate data structures which optimize repeated subdivisions of a
changing base mesh with constant topology. However, these days the mesh
data is stored with simpler to compare data arrays, and we also have
implicit sharing which provides another way to detect unchanged
shared data.
As a very first step to a design where we use OpenSubdiv more directly
and don't store duplicate topology arrays for the base mesh, this PR
provides the converter with the mesh's face offsets array directly
rather than using function calls. For multires reshape the temporary
format is changed to match.
Next steps will do the same thing for face vertices ("corner verts" in
Blender lingo), edges, and creases. Then we can remove the "converter"
indirection completely, then we can work on a better cache invalidation
strategy using implicit sharing. That's a ways off though. On its own,
this PR should just reduce function call overhead a bit.
Reference #130917.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/130241
This commit adds Epoxy as an explicit library requirement for
`intern/opensubdiv`, which uses it in `gl_compute_evaluator.cc`.
This fixes build errors where lite builds that additionally enabled
OpenSubdiv would fail to link due to missing Epoxy symbols. This
problem did not occur in regular release builds due to other CMake
modules adding Epoxy to the library link path in place of OpenSubdiv.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/129740
Similar to 5e46e3d28a.
This commit replaces the C-API version of `OpenSubdiv_Evaluator`
with direct calls to `EvalOutputAPI`. This removes a level of indirection,
theoretically reducing function call overhead, but also making the whole
system easier to understand and easier to modify. The downside is
further spread of `WITH_OPENSUBDIV` into the code, but I think that
can be improved in the future relatively easily once more of this sort
of change is finished.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/128278
Remove the indirection previously used for the topology refiner
to separate C and C++ code. Instead retrieve the base level in
calling code and call opensubdiv API functions directly. This
avoids copying arrays of mesh indices and should reduce
function call overhead since index retrieval can now be inlined.
It also lets us remove a lot of boilerplate shim code.
The downside is increased need for WITH_OPENSUBDIV defines
in various parts of blenkernel, but I think that is required to avoid
the previous indirection and have the kernel deal with OpenSubdiv
more directly.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/120825
Replace the C-class pattern function pointers with actual class methods.
Other than the obvious benefit of not requiring the "this" pointer to be
explicitly passed into every function call, this will make it much simpler
to remove the entire C-API class and replace it with its "impl" next.
For that next step we need to expose code to the implementation
of the topology refiner, so instead of defining stubs locally in the
opensubdiv intern class, we spread some WITH_OPENSUBDIV checks
in the blenkernel. As far as I know this is the only way to remove the
intermediate C-API and call opensubdiv functions directly from there.
Avoid unnecessary indirect includes for the module, which would slow
down compilation. Avoid "using std" which is generally not considered
good practice since it's helpful to see what namespace things are from.
This is just a general cleanup of the area. I was trying to understand
it better to reduce redundant mesh topology storage but finding that
some intermediate cleanups would be helpful to ease the change.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/120743
Bundling many tests in a single binary reduces build time and disk space
usage, but is less convenient for running individual tests command line
as filter flags need to be used.
This adds WITH_TESTS_SINGLE_BINARY to generate one executable file per
source file. Note that enabling this option requires a significant amount
of disk space.
Due to refactoring, the resulting ctest names are a bit different than
before. The number of tests is also a bit different depending if this
option is used, as one uses gtests discovery and the other is organized
purely by filename, which isn't always 1:1.
Co-authored-by: Sergey Sharybin <sergey@blender.org>
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/114604
Along with the 4.1 libraries upgrade, we are bumping the clang-format
version from 8-12 to 17. This affects quite a few files.
If not already the case, you may consider pointing your IDE to the
clang-format binary bundled with the Blender precompiled libraries.
All the relevant code is C++ now, so we don't need to complicate things
with the trip through C anymore. We will still need some wrappers, since
opensubdiv is an optional dependency though. The goal is to make it
simpler to remove the unnecessary/costly abstraction levels between
Blender mesh data and the opensubdiv code.
Add optional argument `STRIP_LEADING_C_COMMENTS` to CMake macros:
data_to_c_simple & data_to_c.
Strip leading C-style comments that don't bloat binary size.
Comments are replaced with blank lines so line numbers in error messages
match. Reduces Blender's binary size by ~70kb.
The goal is to solve confusion of the "All rights reserved" for licensing
code under an open-source license.
The phrase "All rights reserved" comes from a historical convention that
required this phrase for the copyright protection to apply. This convention
is no longer relevant.
However, even though the phrase has no meaning in establishing the copyright
it has not lost meaning in terms of licensing.
This change makes it so code under the Blender Foundation copyright does
not use "all rights reserved". This is also how the GPL license itself
states how to apply it to the source code:
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
This program is free software ...
This change does not change copyright notice in cases when the copyright
is dual (BF and an author), or just an author of the code. It also does
mot change copyright which is inherited from NaN Holding BV as it needs
some further investigation about what is the proper way to handle it.
For example
```
OIIOOutputDriver::~OIIOOutputDriver()
{
}
```
becomes
```
OIIOOutputDriver::~OIIOOutputDriver() {}
```
Saves quite some vertical space, which is especially handy for
constructors.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105594
OSD Lists as 0, 0, 0 this is due to opensubdiv_capi.cc not actually including
the OSD version header, so it's not getting the version define, and the code
in openSubdiv_getVersionHex is really well prepared to deal with any or no
version at all of OSD, catches the problem and returns 0, 0, 0
Given this file is only build when OSD is enabled we can just blindly include
opensubdiv/version.h here
Reviewed by: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16398
This is already the case for most CMake usage.
Although some find modules are an exception to this, as they were
originally maintained externally they use some different conventions.
Also corrected bad indentation in: intern/cycles/CMakeLists.txt
This cleans up the OpenGL build flags and linking.
It additionally also removes some dead code.
One of these dead code paths is WITH_X11_ALPHA which actually never was
active even with the build flag on. The call to use this was never
called because the default initializer for GHOST was set to have it off
per default. Nothing called this function with a boolean value to enable it.
These cleanups are needed to support true headless OpenGL rendering.
Without these cleanups libepoxy will fail to load the correct OpenGL
Libraries as we have already linked them to the blender binary.
Reviewed By: Brecht, Campbell, Jeroen
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D15554
With libepoxy we can choose between EGL and GLX at runtime, as well as
dynamically open EGL and GLX libraries without linking to them.
This will make it possible to build with Wayland, EGL, GLVND support while
still running on systems that only have X11, GLX and libGL. It also paves
the way for headless rendering through EGL.
libepoxy is a new library dependency, and is included in the precompiled
libraries. GLEW is no longer a dependency, and WITH_SYSTEM_GLEW was removed.
Includes contributions by Brecht Van Lommel, Ray Molenkamp, Campbell Barton
and Sergey Sharybin.
Ref T76428
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15291
openSubdiv_init() would detect available evaluators before any OpenGL context
exists, causing a crash with libepoxy. This test however is redundant as we
already check the requirements on the Blender side through the GPU API.
To simplify things, completely remove the device detection in the opensubdiv
module and reduce the evaluators to just CPU and GPU. The plan here is to move
to the GPU module abstraction over OpenGL/Metal/Vulkan and so all these
different backends no longer make sense.
This also removes the user preference for OpenSubdiv compute device, which was
not used for the new GPU subdivision implementation.
Ref D15291
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15470
When multiple objects are in edit mode, UVs for the objects, except for
the first one (in rendering order) appear corrupted. The corruption is
because the UVs are not evaluated as the compute shader is not bound,
thus we read unitialized memory.
We keep track of the currently bound shader in the GPU context in order
to avoid unnecessary shader switches in case the same shader is used in
consecutive calls. However, the shader used by the OpenSubdiv evaluator
is not part of Blender and therefore not tracked via the GPU context.
When extracting UVs for multiple objects, we only ever run a single
shader (FVar evaluation). However, between the compute calls, we also
call the OpenSubdiv stencil evaluation shader, which uses `glUseProgram`
modifying the current program, outside of our control, which then also
unbinds the Blender compute shader making the compute dispatch fail ("No
active compute shader").
The fact that extracting the UVs for the first rendered object works is
because another (Blender) shader was bound in the GPU context prior to
our binding of our evaluation shader.
To fix this, we remember, in the OpenSubdiv evaluator, the current
program so that it can be reset after the stencil program is done.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15064