Files
test2/source/blender/blenkernel/intern/subdiv_eval.cc

Ignoring revisions in .git-blame-ignore-revs. Click here to bypass and see the normal blame view.

383 lines
13 KiB
C++
Raw Normal View History

/* SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2018 Blender Authors
*
* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
/** \file
* \ingroup bke
*/
#include "BKE_subdiv_eval.hh"
#include "BLI_math_vector.h"
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
#include "BLI_task.h"
#include "BLI_utildefines.h"
#include "BKE_customdata.hh"
#include "BKE_mesh.hh"
#include "BKE_subdiv.hh"
#include "MEM_guardedalloc.h"
#include "opensubdiv_evaluator_capi.hh"
#include "opensubdiv_topology_refiner_capi.hh"
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------
* Helper functions.
*/
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
namespace blender::bke::subdiv {
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
static eOpenSubdivEvaluator opensubdiv_evalutor_from_subdiv_evaluator_type(
eSubdivEvaluatorType evaluator_type)
{
switch (evaluator_type) {
case SUBDIV_EVALUATOR_TYPE_CPU: {
return OPENSUBDIV_EVALUATOR_CPU;
}
case SUBDIV_EVALUATOR_TYPE_GPU: {
return OPENSUBDIV_EVALUATOR_GPU;
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
}
}
BLI_assert_msg(0, "Unknown evaluator type");
return OPENSUBDIV_EVALUATOR_CPU;
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------
* Main subdivision evaluation.
*/
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
bool eval_begin(Subdiv *subdiv,
eSubdivEvaluatorType evaluator_type,
OpenSubdiv_EvaluatorCache *evaluator_cache,
const OpenSubdiv_EvaluatorSettings *settings)
{
stats_reset(&subdiv->stats, SUBDIV_STATS_EVALUATOR_CREATE);
if (subdiv->topology_refiner == nullptr) {
/* Happens on input mesh with just loose geometry,
* or when OpenSubdiv is disabled */
return false;
}
if (subdiv->evaluator == nullptr) {
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
eOpenSubdivEvaluator opensubdiv_evaluator_type =
opensubdiv_evalutor_from_subdiv_evaluator_type(evaluator_type);
stats_begin(&subdiv->stats, SUBDIV_STATS_EVALUATOR_CREATE);
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
subdiv->evaluator = openSubdiv_createEvaluatorFromTopologyRefiner(
subdiv->topology_refiner, opensubdiv_evaluator_type, evaluator_cache);
stats_end(&subdiv->stats, SUBDIV_STATS_EVALUATOR_CREATE);
if (subdiv->evaluator == nullptr) {
return false;
}
}
else {
/* TODO(sergey): Check for topology change. */
}
subdiv->evaluator->setSettings(subdiv->evaluator, settings);
eval_init_displacement(subdiv);
return true;
}
#ifdef WITH_OPENSUBDIV
static void set_coarse_positions(Subdiv *subdiv,
const Span<float3> positions,
const bke::LooseVertCache &verts_no_face)
{
OpenSubdiv_Evaluator *evaluator = subdiv->evaluator;
if (verts_no_face.count == 0) {
evaluator->setCoarsePositions(
evaluator, reinterpret_cast<const float *>(positions.data()), 0, positions.size());
return;
}
Array<float3> used_vert_positions(positions.size() - verts_no_face.count);
const BitSpan bits = verts_no_face.is_loose_bits;
int used_vert_count = 0;
for (const int vert : positions.index_range()) {
if (bits[vert]) {
continue;
}
used_vert_positions[used_vert_count] = positions[vert];
used_vert_count++;
}
evaluator->setCoarsePositions(evaluator,
reinterpret_cast<const float *>(used_vert_positions.data()),
0,
used_vert_positions.size());
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
}
/* Context which is used to fill face varying data in parallel. */
struct FaceVaryingDataFromUVContext {
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
OpenSubdiv_TopologyRefiner *topology_refiner;
const Mesh *mesh;
OffsetIndices<int> faces;
Mesh: Move UV layers to generic attributes Currently the `MLoopUV` struct stores UV coordinates and flags related to editing UV maps in the UV editor. This patch changes the coordinates to use the generic 2D vector type, and moves the flags into three separate boolean attributes. This follows the design in T95965, with the ultimate intention of simplifying code and improving performance. Importantly, the change allows exporters and renderers to use UVs "touched" by geometry nodes, which only creates generic attributes. It also allows geometry nodes to create "proper" UV maps from scratch, though only with the Store Named Attribute node for now. The new design considers any 2D vector attribute on the corner domain to be a UV map. In the future, they might be distinguished from regular 2D vectors with attribute metadata, which may be helpful because they are often interpolated differently. Most of the code changes deal with passing around UV BMesh custom data offsets and tracking the boolean "sublayers". The boolean layers are use the following prefixes for attribute names: vert selection: `.vs.`, edge selection: `.es.`, pinning: `.pn.`. Currently these are short to avoid using up the maximum length of attribute names. To accommodate for these 4 extra characters, the name length limit is enlarged to 68 bytes, while the maximum user settable name length is still 64 bytes. Unfortunately Python/RNA API access to the UV flag data becomes slower. Accessing the boolean layers directly is be better for performance in general. Like the other mesh SoA refactors, backward and forward compatibility aren't affected, and won't be changed until 4.0. We pay for that by making mesh reading and writing more expensive with conversions. Resolves T85962 Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14365
2023-01-10 00:47:04 -05:00
const float (*mloopuv)[2];
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
float (*buffer)[2];
int layer_index;
};
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
static void set_face_varying_data_from_uv_task(void *__restrict userdata,
const int face_index,
const TaskParallelTLS *__restrict /*tls*/)
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
{
FaceVaryingDataFromUVContext *ctx = static_cast<FaceVaryingDataFromUVContext *>(userdata);
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
OpenSubdiv_TopologyRefiner *topology_refiner = ctx->topology_refiner;
const int layer_index = ctx->layer_index;
const float(*mluv)[2] = &ctx->mloopuv[ctx->faces[face_index].start()];
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
/* TODO(sergey): OpenSubdiv's C-API converter can change winding of
* loops of a face, need to watch for that, to prevent wrong UVs assigned.
*/
const int num_face_vertices = topology_refiner->getNumFaceVertices(face_index);
const int *uv_indices = topology_refiner->getFaceFVarValueIndices(face_index, layer_index);
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
for (int vertex_index = 0; vertex_index < num_face_vertices; vertex_index++, mluv++) {
Mesh: Move UV layers to generic attributes Currently the `MLoopUV` struct stores UV coordinates and flags related to editing UV maps in the UV editor. This patch changes the coordinates to use the generic 2D vector type, and moves the flags into three separate boolean attributes. This follows the design in T95965, with the ultimate intention of simplifying code and improving performance. Importantly, the change allows exporters and renderers to use UVs "touched" by geometry nodes, which only creates generic attributes. It also allows geometry nodes to create "proper" UV maps from scratch, though only with the Store Named Attribute node for now. The new design considers any 2D vector attribute on the corner domain to be a UV map. In the future, they might be distinguished from regular 2D vectors with attribute metadata, which may be helpful because they are often interpolated differently. Most of the code changes deal with passing around UV BMesh custom data offsets and tracking the boolean "sublayers". The boolean layers are use the following prefixes for attribute names: vert selection: `.vs.`, edge selection: `.es.`, pinning: `.pn.`. Currently these are short to avoid using up the maximum length of attribute names. To accommodate for these 4 extra characters, the name length limit is enlarged to 68 bytes, while the maximum user settable name length is still 64 bytes. Unfortunately Python/RNA API access to the UV flag data becomes slower. Accessing the boolean layers directly is be better for performance in general. Like the other mesh SoA refactors, backward and forward compatibility aren't affected, and won't be changed until 4.0. We pay for that by making mesh reading and writing more expensive with conversions. Resolves T85962 Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14365
2023-01-10 00:47:04 -05:00
copy_v2_v2(ctx->buffer[uv_indices[vertex_index]], *mluv);
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
}
}
static void set_face_varying_data_from_uv(Subdiv *subdiv,
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
const Mesh *mesh,
Mesh: Move UV layers to generic attributes Currently the `MLoopUV` struct stores UV coordinates and flags related to editing UV maps in the UV editor. This patch changes the coordinates to use the generic 2D vector type, and moves the flags into three separate boolean attributes. This follows the design in T95965, with the ultimate intention of simplifying code and improving performance. Importantly, the change allows exporters and renderers to use UVs "touched" by geometry nodes, which only creates generic attributes. It also allows geometry nodes to create "proper" UV maps from scratch, though only with the Store Named Attribute node for now. The new design considers any 2D vector attribute on the corner domain to be a UV map. In the future, they might be distinguished from regular 2D vectors with attribute metadata, which may be helpful because they are often interpolated differently. Most of the code changes deal with passing around UV BMesh custom data offsets and tracking the boolean "sublayers". The boolean layers are use the following prefixes for attribute names: vert selection: `.vs.`, edge selection: `.es.`, pinning: `.pn.`. Currently these are short to avoid using up the maximum length of attribute names. To accommodate for these 4 extra characters, the name length limit is enlarged to 68 bytes, while the maximum user settable name length is still 64 bytes. Unfortunately Python/RNA API access to the UV flag data becomes slower. Accessing the boolean layers directly is be better for performance in general. Like the other mesh SoA refactors, backward and forward compatibility aren't affected, and won't be changed until 4.0. We pay for that by making mesh reading and writing more expensive with conversions. Resolves T85962 Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14365
2023-01-10 00:47:04 -05:00
const float (*mloopuv)[2],
const int layer_index)
{
OpenSubdiv_TopologyRefiner *topology_refiner = subdiv->topology_refiner;
OpenSubdiv_Evaluator *evaluator = subdiv->evaluator;
const int num_faces = topology_refiner->getNumFaces();
Mesh: Move UV layers to generic attributes Currently the `MLoopUV` struct stores UV coordinates and flags related to editing UV maps in the UV editor. This patch changes the coordinates to use the generic 2D vector type, and moves the flags into three separate boolean attributes. This follows the design in T95965, with the ultimate intention of simplifying code and improving performance. Importantly, the change allows exporters and renderers to use UVs "touched" by geometry nodes, which only creates generic attributes. It also allows geometry nodes to create "proper" UV maps from scratch, though only with the Store Named Attribute node for now. The new design considers any 2D vector attribute on the corner domain to be a UV map. In the future, they might be distinguished from regular 2D vectors with attribute metadata, which may be helpful because they are often interpolated differently. Most of the code changes deal with passing around UV BMesh custom data offsets and tracking the boolean "sublayers". The boolean layers are use the following prefixes for attribute names: vert selection: `.vs.`, edge selection: `.es.`, pinning: `.pn.`. Currently these are short to avoid using up the maximum length of attribute names. To accommodate for these 4 extra characters, the name length limit is enlarged to 68 bytes, while the maximum user settable name length is still 64 bytes. Unfortunately Python/RNA API access to the UV flag data becomes slower. Accessing the boolean layers directly is be better for performance in general. Like the other mesh SoA refactors, backward and forward compatibility aren't affected, and won't be changed until 4.0. We pay for that by making mesh reading and writing more expensive with conversions. Resolves T85962 Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14365
2023-01-10 00:47:04 -05:00
const float(*mluv)[2] = mloopuv;
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
const int num_fvar_values = topology_refiner->getNumFVarValues(layer_index);
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
/* Use a temporary buffer so we do not upload UVs one at a time to the GPU. */
float(*buffer)[2] = static_cast<float(*)[2]>(
MEM_mallocN(sizeof(float[2]) * num_fvar_values, __func__));
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
FaceVaryingDataFromUVContext ctx;
ctx.topology_refiner = topology_refiner;
ctx.layer_index = layer_index;
ctx.mloopuv = mluv;
ctx.mesh = mesh;
ctx.faces = mesh->faces();
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
ctx.buffer = buffer;
TaskParallelSettings parallel_range_settings;
BLI_parallel_range_settings_defaults(&parallel_range_settings);
parallel_range_settings.min_iter_per_thread = 1;
BLI_task_parallel_range(
0, num_faces, &ctx, set_face_varying_data_from_uv_task, &parallel_range_settings);
evaluator->setFaceVaryingData(evaluator, layer_index, &buffer[0][0], 0, num_fvar_values);
MEM_freeN(buffer);
}
static void set_vertex_data_from_orco(Subdiv *subdiv, const Mesh *mesh)
{
const float(*orco)[3] = static_cast<const float(*)[3]>(
CustomData_get_layer(&mesh->vert_data, CD_ORCO));
const float(*cloth_orco)[3] = static_cast<const float(*)[3]>(
CustomData_get_layer(&mesh->vert_data, CD_CLOTH_ORCO));
if (orco || cloth_orco) {
const OpenSubdiv_TopologyRefiner *topology_refiner = subdiv->topology_refiner;
OpenSubdiv_Evaluator *evaluator = subdiv->evaluator;
const int num_verts = topology_refiner->getNumVertices();
if (orco && cloth_orco) {
/* Set one by one if have both. */
for (int i = 0; i < num_verts; i++) {
float data[6];
copy_v3_v3(data, orco[i]);
copy_v3_v3(data + 3, cloth_orco[i]);
evaluator->setVertexData(evaluator, data, i, 1);
}
}
else {
/* Faster single call if we have either. */
if (orco) {
evaluator->setVertexData(evaluator, orco[0], 0, num_verts);
}
else if (cloth_orco) {
evaluator->setVertexData(evaluator, cloth_orco[0], 0, num_verts);
}
}
}
}
static void get_mesh_evaluator_settings(OpenSubdiv_EvaluatorSettings *settings, const Mesh *mesh)
{
settings->num_vertex_data = (CustomData_has_layer(&mesh->vert_data, CD_ORCO) ? 3 : 0) +
(CustomData_has_layer(&mesh->vert_data, CD_CLOTH_ORCO) ? 3 : 0);
}
#endif
bool eval_begin_from_mesh(Subdiv *subdiv,
const Mesh *mesh,
const float (*coarse_vertex_cos)[3],
eSubdivEvaluatorType evaluator_type,
OpenSubdiv_EvaluatorCache *evaluator_cache)
{
#ifdef WITH_OPENSUBDIV
OpenSubdiv_EvaluatorSettings settings = {0};
get_mesh_evaluator_settings(&settings, mesh);
if (!eval_begin(subdiv, evaluator_type, evaluator_cache, &settings)) {
return false;
}
return eval_refine_from_mesh(subdiv, mesh, coarse_vertex_cos);
#else
UNUSED_VARS(subdiv, mesh, coarse_vertex_cos, evaluator_type, evaluator_cache);
return false;
#endif
}
bool eval_refine_from_mesh(Subdiv *subdiv, const Mesh *mesh, const float (*coarse_vertex_cos)[3])
{
#ifdef WITH_OPENSUBDIV
if (subdiv->evaluator == nullptr) {
/* NOTE: This situation is supposed to be handled by begin(). */
BLI_assert_msg(0, "Is not supposed to happen");
return false;
}
/* Set coordinates of base mesh vertices. */
set_coarse_positions(
subdiv,
coarse_vertex_cos ?
Span(reinterpret_cast<const float3 *>(coarse_vertex_cos), mesh->verts_num) :
mesh->vert_positions(),
mesh->verts_no_face());
/* Set face-varying data to UV maps. */
const int num_uv_layers = CustomData_number_of_layers(&mesh->corner_data, CD_PROP_FLOAT2);
for (int layer_index = 0; layer_index < num_uv_layers; layer_index++) {
const float(*mloopuv)[2] = static_cast<const float(*)[2]>(
CustomData_get_layer_n(&mesh->corner_data, CD_PROP_FLOAT2, layer_index));
OpenSubDiv: add support for an OpenGL evaluator This evaluator is used in order to evaluate subdivision at render time, allowing for faster renders of meshes with a subdivision surface modifier placed at the last position in the modifier list. When evaluating the subsurf modifier, we detect whether we can delegate evaluation to the draw code. If so, the subdivision is first evaluated on the GPU using our own custom evaluator (only the coarse data needs to be initially sent to the GPU), then, buffers for the final `MeshBufferCache` are filled on the GPU using a set of compute shaders. However, some buffers are still filled on the CPU side, if doing so on the GPU is impractical (e.g. the line adjacency buffer used for x-ray, whose logic is hardly GPU compatible). This is done at the mesh buffer extraction level so that the result can be readily used in the various OpenGL engines, without having to write custom geometry or tesselation shaders. We use our own subdivision evaluation shaders, instead of OpenSubDiv's vanilla one, in order to control the data layout, and interpolation. For example, we store vertex colors as compressed 16-bit integers, while OpenSubDiv's default evaluator only work for float types. In order to still access the modified geometry on the CPU side, for use in modifiers or transform operators, a dedicated wrapper type is added `MESH_WRAPPER_TYPE_SUBD`. Subdivision will be lazily evaluated via `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh` which will create such a wrapper if possible. If the final subdivision surface is not needed on the CPU side, `BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh_no_subsurf` should be used. Enabling or disabling GPU subdivision can be done through the user preferences (under Viewport -> Subdivision). See patch description for benchmarks. Reviewed By: campbellbarton, jbakker, fclem, brecht, #eevee_viewport Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D12406
2021-12-27 16:34:47 +01:00
set_face_varying_data_from_uv(subdiv, mesh, mloopuv, layer_index);
}
/* Set vertex data to orco. */
set_vertex_data_from_orco(subdiv, mesh);
/* Update evaluator to the new coarse geometry. */
stats_begin(&subdiv->stats, SUBDIV_STATS_EVALUATOR_REFINE);
subdiv->evaluator->refine(subdiv->evaluator);
stats_end(&subdiv->stats, SUBDIV_STATS_EVALUATOR_REFINE);
return true;
#else
UNUSED_VARS(subdiv, mesh, coarse_vertex_cos);
return false;
#endif
}
void eval_init_displacement(Subdiv *subdiv)
{
if (subdiv->displacement_evaluator == nullptr) {
return;
}
if (subdiv->displacement_evaluator->initialize == nullptr) {
return;
}
subdiv->displacement_evaluator->initialize(subdiv->displacement_evaluator);
}
/* --------------------------------------------------------------------
* Single point queries.
*/
void eval_limit_point(
Subdiv *subdiv, const int ptex_face_index, const float u, const float v, float r_P[3])
{
eval_limit_point_and_derivatives(subdiv, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_P, nullptr, nullptr);
}
void eval_limit_point_and_derivatives(Subdiv *subdiv,
const int ptex_face_index,
const float u,
const float v,
float r_P[3],
float r_dPdu[3],
float r_dPdv[3])
{
subdiv->evaluator->evaluateLimit(subdiv->evaluator, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_P, r_dPdu, r_dPdv);
/* NOTE: In a very rare occasions derivatives are evaluated to zeros or are exactly equal.
* This happens, for example, in single vertex on Suzannne's nose (where two quads have 2 common
* edges).
*
2022-01-06 13:54:52 +11:00
* This makes tangent space displacement (such as multi-resolution) impossible to be used in
* those vertices, so those needs to be addressed in one way or another.
*
* Simplest thing to do: step inside of the face a little bit, where there is known patch at
* which there must be proper derivatives. This might break continuity of normals, but is better
* that giving totally unusable derivatives. */
if (r_dPdu != nullptr && r_dPdv != nullptr) {
if ((is_zero_v3(r_dPdu) || is_zero_v3(r_dPdv)) || equals_v3v3(r_dPdu, r_dPdv)) {
subdiv->evaluator->evaluateLimit(subdiv->evaluator,
ptex_face_index,
u * 0.999f + 0.0005f,
v * 0.999f + 0.0005f,
r_P,
r_dPdu,
r_dPdv);
}
}
}
void eval_limit_point_and_normal(Subdiv *subdiv,
const int ptex_face_index,
const float u,
const float v,
float r_P[3],
float r_N[3])
{
float dPdu[3], dPdv[3];
eval_limit_point_and_derivatives(subdiv, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_P, dPdu, dPdv);
cross_v3_v3v3(r_N, dPdu, dPdv);
normalize_v3(r_N);
}
void eval_vertex_data(
Subdiv *subdiv, const int ptex_face_index, const float u, const float v, float r_vertex_data[])
{
subdiv->evaluator->evaluateVertexData(subdiv->evaluator, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_vertex_data);
}
void eval_face_varying(Subdiv *subdiv,
const int face_varying_channel,
const int ptex_face_index,
const float u,
const float v,
float r_face_varying[2])
{
subdiv->evaluator->evaluateFaceVarying(
subdiv->evaluator, face_varying_channel, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_face_varying);
}
void eval_displacement(Subdiv *subdiv,
const int ptex_face_index,
const float u,
const float v,
const float dPdu[3],
const float dPdv[3],
float r_D[3])
{
if (subdiv->displacement_evaluator == nullptr) {
zero_v3(r_D);
return;
}
subdiv->displacement_evaluator->eval_displacement(
subdiv->displacement_evaluator, ptex_face_index, u, v, dPdu, dPdv, r_D);
}
void eval_final_point(
Subdiv *subdiv, const int ptex_face_index, const float u, const float v, float r_P[3])
{
if (subdiv->displacement_evaluator) {
float dPdu[3], dPdv[3], D[3];
eval_limit_point_and_derivatives(subdiv, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_P, dPdu, dPdv);
eval_displacement(subdiv, ptex_face_index, u, v, dPdu, dPdv, D);
add_v3_v3(r_P, D);
}
else {
eval_limit_point(subdiv, ptex_face_index, u, v, r_P);
}
}
} // namespace blender::bke::subdiv