This panel is arguably the most important in the ViewLayer properties, so
the concept of "1 panel open per context" doesn't work. Especially since
the first panel (View Layer) contains only two settings.
This also registers the Passes panels before filter/override so it's sorted in the same way as EEVEE.
Viewport drawing has moved to offscreen buffers, and we no longer need to have
depth, stencil, aa samples, sRGB buffers as part of the window. So all that
code is removed now. The depth buffer was the only one still being allocated,
its removal save a bit of memory.
Code by Germano and Brecht.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D4708
This never really worked as it was supposed to. The main goal of this is to
turn noise from sampling tiny hairs into multiple layers of transparency that
do not need to be sampled stochastically. However the implementation of this
worked by randomly discarding hair intersections in BVH traversal, which
defeats the purpose.
If it ever comes back, it's best implemented outside the kernel as a preprocess
that changes hair radius before BVH building. This would also make it work with
Embree, where it's not supported now. But it's not so clear anymore that with
many AA samples and GPU rendering this feature is as helpful as it once was for
CPU raytracers with few AA samples.
The benefit of removing this feature is improved hair ray tracing performance,
tested on NVIDIA Titan Xp:
bmw27: +0.37%
classroom: +0.26%
fishy_cat: -7.36%
koro: -12.98%
pabellon: -0.12%
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D4532
Shader nodes are now shared with Eevee, so makes more sense to have it in
the core and not be Cycles specific.
Fix T62415: issues with append/link of old Cycles settings.
Now that B-Bone shape data is kept in bPoseChannel_Runtime, the
armature level cache only holds one quaternion value per bone.
It can also be moved to runtime, and the structure removed.
This has an additional effect that, as far as I can tell, now
the Armature modifier can run as soon as all of the bones it
actually needs are done, thus making T59848 a purely depsgraph
level problem.
This is an odd-ball: it's a library which has own style and
guidelines, and just happened to be developed by Blender developers
and also happened to rely on some functionality of intern/ for its
C-API.
Might consider using Google's clang-format in the future (this is
what the style is supposed to be in this library).
Use CMake's target_link_libraries instead of manually maintaining
library dependencies in a single list.
In practice adding new libraries often ended up being guess-work,
now each library lists the libraries it uses.
This was used for the game player executable so libraries
could optionally link to stubs.
If we need this functionality it can be done using target-properties
as described in T46725.
No functional change, this adds LIB definition and args to cmake files.
Without this it's difficult to migrate away from 'BLENDER_SORTED_LIBS'
since there are many platforms/configurations that could break when
changing linking order.
Manually add and enable WITHOUT_SORTED_LIBS to try building
without sorted libs (currently fails since all variables are empty).
This check will eventually be removed.
See T46725.
GCC 9 started implementing the OpenMP 4.0 and later behavior. When not using
default clause or when using default(shared), this makes no difference, but
if using default(none), previously the choice was not specify the const
qualified variables on the construct at all, or specify in firstprivate
clause. In GCC 9 as well as for OpenMP 4.0 compliance, those variables need
to be specified on constructs in which they are used, either in shared or
in firstprivate clause. Specifying them in firstprivate clause is one way to
achieve compatibility with both older GCC versions and GCC 9,
another option is to drop the default(none) clause.
This patch thus drops the default(none) clause.
See https://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-9/porting_to.html#ompdatasharing
Signed-off-by: Robert-André Mauchin <zebob.m@gmail.com>