Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sergey Sharybin
3c10ec96b5 Cycles: Enable object motion blur on Intel OpenCL platform
This required allocating some memory related on object transform needed
by ShaderData and currently it is done for all the platforms. Since we're
targeting full feature-complete platforms this is rather acceptable at
this point and in the future we'll do selective NO_HAIR/NO_SSS/NO_BLUR
kernels.

This is experimental still and in fact there're some major issues on
NVidia platform and it's not really clear if it's a bug in compiler,
some uninitizlied variable or other kind of issue.
2015-05-15 00:48:12 +05:00
Sergey Sharybin
f6c6dd44de Cycles: Remove meaningless ifdef checks for features in device_opencl
This file was actually checking for features enabled on CPU and surely all
of them were enabled, so removing them does not cause any difference.

ideally we'll need to do runtime feature detection and just pass some stuff
as NULL to the kernel, or maybe also have variadic kernel entry points which
is also possible quite easily.
2015-05-14 23:44:19 +05:00
George Kyriazis
7f4479da42 Cycles: OpenCL kernel split
This commit contains all the work related on the AMD megakernel split work
which was mainly done by Varun Sundar, George Kyriazis and Lenny Wang, plus
some help from Sergey Sharybin, Martijn Berger, Thomas Dinges and likely
someone else which we're forgetting to mention.

Currently only AMD cards are enabled for the new split kernel, but it is
possible to force split opencl kernel to be used by setting the following
environment variable: CYCLES_OPENCL_SPLIT_KERNEL_TEST=1.

Not all the features are supported yet, and that being said no motion blur,
camera blur, SSS and volumetrics for now. Also transparent shadows are
disabled on AMD device because of some compiler bug.

This kernel is also only implements regular path tracing and supporting
branched one will take a bit. Branched path tracing is exposed to the
interface still, which is a bit misleading and will be hidden there soon.

More feature will be enabled once they're ported to the split kernel and
tested.

Neither regular CPU nor CUDA has any difference, they're generating the
same exact code, which means no regressions/improvements there.

Based on the research paper:

  https://research.nvidia.com/sites/default/files/publications/laine2013hpg_paper.pdf

Here's the documentation:

  https://docs.google.com/document/d/1LuXW-CV-sVJkQaEGZlMJ86jZ8FmoPfecaMdR-oiWbUY/edit

Design discussion of the patch:

  https://developer.blender.org/T44197

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D1200
2015-05-09 19:52:40 +05:00