Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Aras Pranckevicius
213cd39b6d OBJ: further optimize, cleanup and harden the new C++ importer
Continued improvements to the new C++ based OBJ importer.

Performance: about 2x faster.
- Rungholt.obj (several meshes, 263MB file): Windows 12.7s -> 5.9s, Mac 7.7s -> 3.1s.
- Blender 3.0 splash (24k meshes, 2.4GB file): Windows 97.3s -> 53.6s, Mac 137.3s -> 80.0s.
- "Windows" is VS2022, AMD Ryzen 5950X (32 threads), "Mac" is Xcode/clang 13, M1Max (10 threads).
- Slightly reduced memory usage during import as well.

The performance gains are a combination of several things:
- Replacing `std::stof` / `std::stoi` with C++17 `from_chars`.
- Stop reading input file char-by-char using `std::getline`, and instead read in 64kb chunks, and parse from there (taking care of possibly handling lines split mid-way due to chunk boundaries).
- Removing abstractions for splitting a line by some char,
- Avoid tiny memory allocations: instead of storing a vector of polygon corners in each face, store all the corners in one big array, and per-face only store indices "where do corners start, and how many". Likewise, don't store full string names of material/group names for each face; only store indices into overall material/group names arrays.
- Stop always doing mesh validation, which is slow. Do it just like the Alembic importer does: only do validation if found some invalid faces during import, or if requested by the user via an import setting checkbox (which defaults to off).
- Stop doing "collection sync" for each object being added; instead do the collection sync right after creating all the objects.

Cleanup / Robustness:

This reworking of parser (see "removing abstractions" point above) means that all the functions that were in `parser_string_utils` file are gone, and replaced with different set of functions. However they are not OBJ specific, so as pointed out during review of the previous differential, they are now in `source/blender/io/common` library.

Added gtest coverage for said functions as well; something that was only indirectly covered by obj tests previously.

Rework of some bits of parsing made the parser actually better able to deal with invalid syntax. E.g. previously, if a face corner were a `/123` string, it would have incorrectly treated that as a vertex index (since it would get "hey that's one number" after splitting a string by a slash), instead of properly marking it as invalid syntax.

Added gtest coverage for .mtl parsing; something that was not covered by any tests at all previously.

Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14586
2022-04-17 22:07:43 +03:00
Campbell Barton
744369c114 Cleanup: move doc-strings into headers
- The comment for create_normals was moved into an inline note
  as it's not related to the public API.
- Use a colon after parameters.

Ref T92709
2022-04-05 07:49:36 +10:00
Ankit Meel
e6a9b22384 OBJ: New C++ based wavefront OBJ importer
This takes state of soc-2020-io-performance branch as it was at
e9bbfd0c8c7 (2021 Oct 31), merges latest master (2022 Apr 4),
adds a bunch of tests, and fixes a bunch of stuff found by said
tests. The fixes are detailed in the differential.

Timings on my machine (Windows, VS2022 release build, AMD Ryzen
5950X 32 threads):

- Rungholt minecraft level (269MB file, 1 mesh): 54.2s -> 14.2s
  (memory usage: 7.0GB -> 1.9GB).
- Blender 3.0 splash scene: "I waited for 90 minutes and gave up"
  -> 109s. Now, this time is not great, but at least 20% of the
  time is spent assigning unique names for the imported objects
  (the scene has 24 thousand objects). This is not specific to obj
  importer, but rather a general issue across blender overall.

Test suite file updates done in Subversion tests repository.

Reviewed By: @howardt, @sybren
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13958
2022-04-04 13:36:10 +03:00
Aras Pranckevicius
70720c42c2 Fix T96303: C++ OBJ exporter needs presets and skip modifiers.
This patch, D14303, from Aras Pranckevicius adds presets to the OBJ exporter,
and also adds a checkbox (default on) to apply modifiers before export.
2022-03-13 12:04:52 -04:00
Campbell Barton
c434782e3a File headers: SPDX License migration
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
2022-02-11 09:14:36 +11:00
Campbell Barton
d608b98145 Cleanup: quite missing-variable-declarations warnings 2022-01-11 18:16:00 +11:00
Howard Trickey
4e44cfa3d9 Add a new C++ version of an exporter for the Wavefront .obj format.
This was originally written by Ankit Meel as a GSoC 2020 project.
Howard Trickey added some tests and made some corrections/modifications.
See D13046 for more details.

This commit inserts a new menu item into the export menu called
"Wavefront OBJ (.obj) - New".
For now the old Python exporter remains in the menu, along with
the Python importer, but we plan to remove it soon (leaving the
old addon bundled with Blender but not enabled by default).
2022-01-03 14:49:31 -05:00