Commit Graph

122 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Campbell Barton
e955c94ed3 License Headers: Set copyright to "Blender Authors", add AUTHORS
Listing the "Blender Foundation" as copyright holder implied the Blender
Foundation holds copyright to files which may include work from many
developers.

While keeping copyright on headers makes sense for isolated libraries,
Blender's own code may be refactored or moved between files in a way
that makes the per file copyright holders less meaningful.

Copyright references to the "Blender Foundation" have been replaced with
"Blender Authors", with the exception of `./extern/` since these this
contains libraries which are more isolated, any changed to license
headers there can be handled on a case-by-case basis.

Some directories in `./intern/` have also been excluded:

- `./intern/cycles/` it's own `AUTHORS` file is planned.
- `./intern/opensubdiv/`.

An "AUTHORS" file has been added, using the chromium projects authors
file as a template.

Design task: #110784

Ref !110783.
2023-08-16 00:20:26 +10:00
Hans Goudey
dc7979a056 Cleanup: Make geometry set naming more consistent
Remove the "_for_read" suffix from methods to get geometry and geometry
components. That should be considered the default, so the suffix just
adds unnecessary text. This is consistent with the attribute API and
various implicit sharing data access methods.

Use "from_mesh" instead of "create_with_mesh". This is consistent with
the recently used naming for the `IndexMask` API.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110738
2023-08-03 17:09:18 +02:00
Hans Goudey
731d296f35 Cleanup: Move mesh related blenkernel headers to C++
See #103343

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110730
2023-08-02 22:14:18 +02:00
Hans Goudey
95edff7495 Cleanup: Rename mesh custom data fields
Implements the rest of #101689, after 5e9ea9243b.

- `vdata` -> `vert_data`
- `edata` -> `edge_data`
- `pdata` -> `face_data`
- `ldata` -> `loop_data`

A deeper rename of `loop` to `corner` will be proposed as a next
step, and renaming `totvert` and `totedge` can be done separately.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110432
2023-07-25 21:15:52 +02:00
Hans Goudey
5e9ea9243b Mesh: Rename "polys" to "faces"
Implements part of #101689.

The "poly" name was chosen to distinguish the `MLoop` + `MPoly`
combination from the `MFace` struct it replaced. Those two structures
persisted together for a long time, but nowadays `MPoly` is gone, and
`MFace` is only used in some legacy code like the particle system.

To avoid unnecessarily using a different term, increase consistency
with the UI and with BMesh, and generally make code a bit easier to
read, this commit replaces the `poly` term with `poly`. Most variables
that use the term are renamed too. `Mesh.totface` and `Mesh.fdata` now
have a `_legacy` suffix to reduce confusion. In a next step, `pdata`
can be renamed to `face_data` as well.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109819
2023-07-24 22:06:55 +02:00
Hans Goudey
ec30217755 Cleanup: Simplify access to next face corner in domain interpolation 2023-07-06 13:40:42 -04:00
Hans Goudey
f4124ee02d Cleanup: Move GeometrySet and components to proper namespace
Move `GeometrySet` and `GeometryComponent` and subclasses
to the `blender::bke` namespace. This wasn't done earlier since
these were one of the first C++ classes used throughout Blender,
but now it is common.

Also remove the now-unnecessary C-header, since all users of
the geometry set header are now in C++.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109020
2023-06-15 22:18:28 +02:00
Hans Goudey
e5ec04d73c Mesh: Move vertex/edge crease to generic attributes
Store subdivision surface creases in two new named float attributes:
- `crease_vert`
- `crease_edge`
This is similar to 2a56403cb0.

The attributes are naming conventions, so their data type and domain
aren't enforced, and may be interpolated when necessary. Editing tools
and the subdivision surface modifier use the hard-coded name. It might
be best if these were edited as generic attributes in the future, but
in the meantime using generic attributes helps.

The attributes are visible in the list, which is how they're now meant
to be removed. They are now interchangeable with any tool that works
with the generic attribute system-- even tools like vertex paint can
affect creases now.

This is a breaking change. Forward compatibility isn't preserved for
versions before 3.6, and the `crease` property in RNA is removed in
favor of making a smaller API surface area with just the attribute API.
`Mesh.vertex_creases` and `Mesh.edge_creases` now just return the
matching attribute if possible, and are now implemented in Python.
New functions `*ensure` and `*remove` also replace the operators to
add and remove the layers for Python.

A few extrude node test files have to be updated because of different
(now generic) attribute interpolation behavior.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/108089
2023-06-13 20:23:39 +02:00
Hans Goudey
319b68763f Cleanup: Simplify namespaces in geometry component files 2023-06-08 08:29:15 -04:00
Hans Goudey
3503f7675c Cleanup: Remove unused forward declaration 2023-06-08 08:28:57 -04:00
Sergey Sharybin
c1bc70b711 Cleanup: Add a copyright notice to files and use SPDX format
A lot of files were missing copyright field in the header and
the Blender Foundation contributed to them in a sense of bug
fixing and general maintenance.

This change makes it explicit that those files are at least
partially copyrighted by the Blender Foundation.

Note that this does not make it so the Blender Foundation is
the only holder of the copyright in those files, and developers
who do not have a signed contract with the foundation still
hold the copyright as well.

Another aspect of this change is using SPDX format for the
header. We already used it for the license specification,
and now we state it for the copyright as well, following the
FAQ:

    https://reuse.software/faq/
2023-05-31 16:19:06 +02:00
Jacques Lucke
2cfcb8b0b8 BLI: refactor IndexMask for better performance and memory usage
Goals of this refactor:
* Reduce memory consumption of `IndexMask`. The old `IndexMask` uses an
  `int64_t` for each index which is more than necessary in pretty much all
  practical cases currently. Using `int32_t` might still become limiting
  in the future in case we use this to index e.g. byte buffers larger than
  a few gigabytes. We also don't want to template `IndexMask`, because
  that would cause a split in the "ecosystem", or everything would have to
  be implemented twice or templated.
* Allow for more multi-threading. The old `IndexMask` contains a single
  array. This is generally good but has the problem that it is hard to fill
  from multiple-threads when the final size is not known from the beginning.
  This is commonly the case when e.g. converting an array of bool to an
  index mask. Currently, this kind of code only runs on a single thread.
* Allow for efficient set operations like join, intersect and difference.
  It should be possible to multi-thread those operations.
* It should be possible to iterate over an `IndexMask` very efficiently.
  The most important part of that is to avoid all memory access when iterating
  over continuous ranges. For some core nodes (e.g. math nodes), we generate
  optimized code for the cases of irregular index masks and simple index ranges.

To achieve these goals, a few compromises had to made:
* Slicing of the mask (at specific indices) and random element access is
  `O(log #indices)` now, but with a low constant factor. It should be possible
  to split a mask into n approximately equally sized parts in `O(n)` though,
  making the time per split `O(1)`.
* Using range-based for loops does not work well when iterating over a nested
  data structure like the new `IndexMask`. Therefor, `foreach_*` functions with
  callbacks have to be used. To avoid extra code complexity at the call site,
  the `foreach_*` methods support multi-threading out of the box.

The new data structure splits an `IndexMask` into an arbitrary number of ordered
`IndexMaskSegment`. Each segment can contain at most `2^14 = 16384` indices. The
indices within a segment are stored as `int16_t`. Each segment has an additional
`int64_t` offset which allows storing arbitrary `int64_t` indices. This approach
has the main benefits that segments can be processed/constructed individually on
multiple threads without a serial bottleneck. Also it reduces the memory
requirements significantly.

For more details see comments in `BLI_index_mask.hh`.

I did a few tests to verify that the data structure generally improves
performance and does not cause regressions:
* Our field evaluation benchmarks take about as much as before. This is to be
  expected because we already made sure that e.g. add node evaluation is
  vectorized. The important thing here is to check that changes to the way we
  iterate over the indices still allows for auto-vectorization.
* Memory usage by a mask is about 1/4 of what it was before in the average case.
  That's mainly caused by the switch from `int64_t` to `int16_t` for indices.
  In the worst case, the memory requirements can be larger when there are many
  indices that are very far away. However, when they are far away from each other,
  that indicates that there aren't many indices in total. In common cases, memory
  usage can be way lower than 1/4 of before, because sub-ranges use static memory.
* For some more specific numbers I benchmarked `IndexMask::from_bools` in
  `index_mask_from_selection` on 10.000.000 elements at various probabilities for
  `true` at every index:
  ```
  Probability      Old        New
  0              4.6 ms     0.8 ms
  0.001          5.1 ms     1.3 ms
  0.2            8.4 ms     1.8 ms
  0.5           15.3 ms     3.0 ms
  0.8           20.1 ms     3.0 ms
  0.999         25.1 ms     1.7 ms
  1             13.5 ms     1.1 ms
  ```

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/104629
2023-05-24 18:11:41 +02:00
Hans Goudey
098e58ea24 Attributes: Allow attribute API to create non-deleteable attributes
This can be useful to allow creating these core attributes with shared
arrays. Otherwise CustomData has to be used directly, which is nice
to avoid. This was done in e45ed69349, but not everywhere.
2023-04-28 10:24:32 -04:00
Jacques Lucke
b4d914b676 BLI: support weak users and version in implicit sharing info
The main goal of these changes is to support checking if some data has
been changed over time. This is used by the WIP simulation nodes during
baking to detect which attributes have to be stored in every frame because
they have changed.

By using a combination of a weak user count and a version counter, it is
possible to detect that an attribute (or any data controlled by implicit
sharing) has not been changed with O(1) memory and time. It's still
possible that the data has been changed multiple times and is the same
in the end and beginning of course. That wouldn't be detected using this
mechanism.

The `ImplicitSharingInfo` struct has a new weak user count. A weak
reference is one that does not keep the referenced data alive, but makes sure
that the `ImplicitSharingInfo` itself is not deleted. If some piece of
data has one strong and multiple weak users, it is still mutable. If the
strong user count goes down to zero, the referenced data is freed.
Remaining weak users can check for this condition using `is_expired`.

This is a bit similar to `std::weak_ptr` but there is an important difference:
a weak user can not become a strong user while one can create a `shared_ptr`
from a `weak_ptr`. This restriction is necessary, because some code might
be changing the referenced data assuming that it is the only owner. If
another thread suddenly adds a new owner, the data would be shared again
and the first thread would not have been allowed to modify the data in
the first place.

There is also a new integer version counter in `ImplicitSharingInfo`.
It is incremented whenever some code wants to modify the referenced data.
Obviously, this can only be done when the data is not shared because then
it would be immutable. By comparing an old and new version number of the
same sharing info, one can check if the data has been modified. One has
to keep a weak reference to the sharing info together with the old version
number to ensure that the new sharing info is still the same as the old one.
Without this, it can happen that the sharing info was freed and a new
one was allocated at the same pointer address. Using a strong reference
for this purpose does not work, because then the data would never be
modified because it's shared.
2023-04-28 12:05:00 +02:00
Hans Goudey
8e967cfeaf Mesh: Cache loose vertices
Similar to the cache of loose edges added in 1ea169d90e,
cache the number of loose vertices and which are loose in a bit map.
This can save significant time when drawing large meshes in the
viewport, because recalculations can be avoided when the data doesn't
change, and because many geometry nodes set the loose geometry
caches eagerly when the meshes contain no loose elements.

There are two types of loose vertices:
1. Vertices not used by any edges or faces
   `Mesh.loose_verts()`
2. Vertices not used by any faces (may be used by loose edges)
   `Mesh.verts_no_face()`

Because both are used by Blender in various places, because the cost
is only a bit per vertex (or constant at best) and for design consistency,
we cache both types of loose elements. The bit maps will only be
allocated when they're actually used, but they are already accessed
in a few important places:
- Attribute domain interpolation
- Subdivision surface modifier
- Viewport drawing

Just skipping viewport drawing calculation after certain geometry
nodes setups can have a large impact. Here is the time taken by
viewport loose geometry extraction before and after the change:
- 4 million vertex grid node: 28 ms to 0 ms
- Large molecular nodes setup (curve to mesh node): 104 ms to 0 ms
- Realize instances with 1 million cubes: 131 ms to 0 ms

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105567
2023-04-22 13:46:11 +02:00
Hans Goudey
7535ab412a Cleanup: Remove redundant "reference" argument to geometry copy
Implicit sharing means attribute ownership is shared between geometry
data-blocks, and the sharing happens automatically. So it's unnecessary
to choose whether to enable it when copying a mesh.
2023-04-19 15:52:56 -04:00
Hans Goudey
e45ed69349 Attributes: Integrate implicit sharing with the attribute API
Add the ability to retrieve implicit sharing info directly from the
C++ attribute API, which simplifies memory usage and performance
optimizations making use of it. This commit uses the additions to
the API to avoid copies in a few places:
- The "rest_position" attribute in the mesh modifier stack
- Instance on Points node
- Instances to points node
- Mesh to points node
- Points to vertices node

Many files are affected because in order to include the new information
in the API's returned data, I had to switch a bunch of types from
`VArray` to `AttributeReader`. This generally makes sense anyway, since
it allows retrieving the domain, which wasn't possible before in some
cases. I overloaded the `*` deference operator for some syntactic sugar
to avoid the (very ugly) `.varray` that would be necessary otherwise.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/107059
2023-04-19 11:21:06 +02:00
Hans Goudey
d818d05415 Cleanup: Remove unnecessary attribute provider callbacks
We don't use the callbacks that create virtual arrays from the custom data
anymore, they just add extra indirection. The only non-obvious case was
the crease attribute which had a setter function. Replace that with an
attribute validator like the other similar attributes.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/107088
2023-04-18 17:13:38 +02:00
Hans Goudey
2a4323c2f5 Mesh: Move edges to a generic attribute
Implements #95966, as the final step of #95965.

This commit changes the storage of mesh edge vertex indices from the
`MEdge` type to the generic `int2` attribute type. This follows the
general design for geometry and the attribute system, where the data
storage type and the usage semantics are separated.

The main benefit of the change is reduced memory usage-- the
requirements of storing mesh edges is reduced by 1/3. For example,
this saves 8MB on a 1 million vertex grid. This also gives performance
benefits to any memory-bound mesh processing algorithm that uses edges.

Another benefit is that all of the edge's vertex indices are
contiguous. In a few cases, it's helpful to process all of them as
`Span<int>` rather than `Span<int2>`. Similarly, the type is more
likely to match a generic format used by a library, or code that
shouldn't know about specific Blender `Mesh` types.

Various Notes:
- The `.edge_verts` name is used to reflect a mapping between domains,
  similar to `.corner_verts`, etc. The period means that it the data
  shouldn't change arbitrarily by the user or procedural operations.
- `edge[0]` is now used instead of `edge.v1`
- Signed integers are used instead of unsigned to reduce the mixing
  of signed-ness, which can be error prone.
- All of the previously used core mesh data types (`MVert`, `MEdge`,
  `MLoop`, `MPoly` are now deprecated. Only generic types are used).
- The `vec2i` DNA type is used in the few C files where necessary.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/106638
2023-04-17 13:47:41 +02:00
Hans Goudey
7966cd16d6 Mesh: Replace MPoly struct with offset indices
Implements #95967.

Currently the `MPoly` struct is 12 bytes, and stores the index of a
face's first corner and the number of corners/verts/edges. Polygons
and corners are always created in order by Blender, meaning each
face's corners will be after the previous face's corners. We can take
advantage of this fact and eliminate the redundancy in mesh face
storage by only storing a single integer corner offset for each face.
The size of the face is then encoded by the offset of the next face.
The size of a single integer is 4 bytes, so this reduces memory
usage by 3 times.

The same method is used for `CurvesGeometry`, so Blender already has
an abstraction to simplify using these offsets called `OffsetIndices`.
This class is used to easily retrieve a range of corner indices for
each face. This also gives the opportunity for sharing some logic with
curves.

Another benefit of the change is that the offsets and sizes stored in
`MPoly` can no longer disagree with each other. Storing faces in the
order of their corners can simplify some code too.

Face/polygon variables now use the `IndexRange` type, which comes with
quite a few utilities that can simplify code.

Some:
- The offset integer array has to be one longer than the face count to
  avoid a branch for every face, which means the data is no longer part
  of the mesh's `CustomData`.
- We lose the ability to "reference" an original mesh's offset array
  until more reusable CoW from #104478 is committed. That will be added
  in a separate commit.
- Since they aren't part of `CustomData`, poly offsets often have to be
  copied manually.
- To simplify using `OffsetIndices` in many places, some functions and
  structs in headers were moved to only compile in C++.
- All meshes created by Blender use the same order for faces and face
  corners, but just in case, meshes with mismatched order are fixed by
  versioning code.
- `MeshPolygon.totloop` is no longer editable in RNA. This API break is
  necessary here unfortunately. It should be worth it in 3.6, since
  that's the best way to allow loading meshes from 4.0, which is
  important for an LTS version.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105938
2023-04-04 20:39:28 +02:00
Sergey Sharybin
d32d787f5f Clang-Format: Allow empty functions to be single-line
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
2023-03-29 16:50:54 +02:00
Hans Goudey
5c3f4195b6 Cleanup: Move poly topology lookup functions to C++ header
Standardize naming, use spans and references for input parameters,
and improve documentation. Now the functions expect the lookups to
succeed as well, they will fail and assert otherwise.

The functions are also simple enough that it likely makes sense to keep
them all inlined
2023-03-22 17:11:41 -04:00
Hans Goudey
16fbadde36 Mesh: Replace MLoop struct with generic attributes
Implements #102359.

Split the `MLoop` struct into two separate integer arrays called
`corner_verts` and `corner_edges`, referring to the vertex each corner
is attached to and the next edge around the face at each corner. These
arrays can be sliced to give access to the edges or vertices in a face.
Then they are often referred to as "poly_verts" or "poly_edges".

The main benefits are halving the necessary memory bandwidth when only
one array is used and simplifications from using regular integer indices
instead of a special-purpose struct.

The commit also starts a renaming from "loop" to "corner" in mesh code.

Like the other mesh struct of array refactors, forward compatibility is
kept by writing files with the older format. This will be done until 4.0
to ease the transition process.

Looking at a small portion of the patch should give a good impression
for the rest of the changes. I tried to make the changes as small as
possible so it's easy to tell the correctness from the diff. Though I
found Blender developers have been very inventive over the last decade
when finding different ways to loop over the corners in a face.

For performance, nearly every piece of code that deals with `Mesh` is
slightly impacted. Any algorithm that is memory bottle-necked should
see an improvement. For example, here is a comparison of interpolating
a vertex float attribute to face corners (Ryzen 3700x):

**Before** (Average: 3.7 ms, Min: 3.4 ms)
```
threading::parallel_for(loops.index_range(), 4096, [&](IndexRange range) {
  for (const int64_t i : range) {
    dst[i] = src[loops[i].v];
  }
});
```

**After** (Average: 2.9 ms, Min: 2.6 ms)
```
array_utils::gather(src, corner_verts, dst);
```

That's an improvement of 28% to the average timings, and it's also a
simplification, since an index-based routine can be used instead.
For more examples using the new arrays, see the design task.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/104424
2023-03-20 15:55:13 +01:00
Hans Goudey
1dc57a89e9 Mesh: Move functions to C++ header
Refactoring mesh code, it has become clear that local cleanups and
simplifications are limited by the need to keep a C public API for
mesh functions. This change makes code more obvious and makes further
refactoring much easier.

- Add a new `BKE_mesh.hh` header for a C++ only mesh API
- Introduce a new `blender::bke::mesh` namespace, documented here:
  https://wiki.blender.org/wiki/Source/Objects/Mesh#Namespaces
- Move some functions to the new namespace, cleaning up their arguments
- Move code to `Array` and `float3` where necessary to use the new API
- Define existing inline mesh data access functions to the new header
- Keep some C API functions where necessary because of RNA
- Move all C++ files to use the new header, which includes the old one

In the future it may make sense to split up `BKE_mesh.hh` more, but for
now keeping the same name as the existing header keeps things simple.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105416
2023-03-12 22:29:15 +01:00
Hans Goudey
5876573e14 Mesh: Move face shade smooth flag to a generic attribute
Currently the shade smooth status for mesh faces is stored as part of
`MPoly::flag`. As described in #95967, this moves that information
to a separate boolean attribute. It also flips its status, so the
attribute is now called `sharp_face`, which mirrors the existing
`sharp_edge` attribute. The attribute doesn't need to be allocated
when all faces are smooth. Forward compatibility is kept until
4.0 like the other mesh refactors.

This will reduce memory bandwidth requirements for some operations,
since the array of booleans uses 12 times less memory than `MPoly`.
It also allows faces to be stored more efficiently in the future, since
the flag is now unused. It's also possible to use generic functions to
process the values. For example, finding whether there is a sharp face
is just `sharp_faces.contains(true)`.

The `shade_smooth` attribute is no longer accessible with geometry nodes.
Since there were dedicated accessor nodes for that data, that shouldn't
be a problem. That's difficult to version automatically since the named
attribute nodes could be used in arbitrary combinations.

**Implementation notes:**
- The attribute and array variables in the code use the `sharp_faces`
  term, to be consistent with the user-facing "sharp faces" wording,
  and to avoid requiring many renames when #101689 is implemented.
- Cycles now accesses smooth face status with the generic attribute,
  to avoid overhead.
- Changing the zero-value from "smooth" to "flat" takes some care to
  make sure defaults are the same.
  - Versioning for the edge mode extrude node is particularly complex.
    New nodes are added by versioning to propagate the attribute in its
    old inverted state.
- A lot of access is still done through the `CustomData` API rather
  than the attribute API because of a few functions. That can be
  cleaned up easily in the future.
- In the future we would benefit from a way to store attributes as a
  single value for when all faces are sharp.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/104422
2023-03-08 15:36:18 +01:00
Hans Goudey
3022a805ca Cleanup: Standardize mesh edge and poly naming
With the goal of clearly differentiating between arrays and single
elements, improving consistency across Blender, and using wording
that's easier to read and say, change variable names for Mesh edges
and polygons/faces.

Common renames are the following, with some extra prefixes, etc.
 - `mpoly` -> `polys`
 - `mpoly`/`mp`/`p` -> `poly`
 - `medge` -> `edges`
 - `med`/`ed`/`e` -> `edge`

`MLoop` variables aren't affected because they will be replaced
when they're split up into to arrays in #104424.
2023-03-01 15:58:01 -05:00
Hans Goudey
c3d803c2ef Cleanup: Use consistent "positions" term for mesh update tag functions
Consistent with naming from 1af62cb3bf. Keep the "coord"
naming in the "vert_coords_alloc" set of functions since they should be
removed (see #103789).
2023-02-27 16:08:48 -05:00
Hans Goudey
b37111c574 Cleanup: Use consistent "vert" term for mesh normals
Use "vert" instead of "vertex" when referring to mesh normals. This was
discussed as part of 1af62cb3bf but never completely
implemented.
2023-02-27 15:52:29 -05:00
Campbell Barton
efb86b75ee Cleanup: comment block formatting 2023-02-27 21:51:57 +11:00
Julian Eisel
c437a8aea8 Revert release branch only commit after merge
This is a revert of a revert, because the initial revert is only
supposed to be in the release branch.

This reverts commit 3eed00dc54.
2023-02-20 11:51:16 +01:00
Julian Eisel
3eed00dc54 Revert "GPencil: Include UV information in simplify->sample modifier."
This reverts commit 19222627c6.

Something went wrong here, seems like this commit merged the main branch
into the release branch, which should never be done.
2023-02-20 11:20:07 +01:00
YimingWu
19222627c6 GPencil: Include UV information in simplify->sample modifier.
Simplify modifier sample mode didn't transfer UV parameters, now fixed.

Pull Request #104942
2023-02-19 11:45:22 +01:00
Dalai Felinto
4ec9aff2af Revert "Fix #104850: Create Geometry Nodes operators fails if not in English"
This reverts commit 68181c2560.

I merged 3.6 into 3.5 by mistake. Basically I had a PR against main,
 then changed it in the last minute to be against 3.5 via the
 web-interface unaware that I shouldn't do it without updating the
 patch.

 Original Pull Request: #104889
2023-02-17 18:45:42 +01:00
Dalai Felinto
68181c2560 Fix #104850: Create Geometry Nodes operators fails if not in English
Note that the node group has its sockets names
translated, while the built-in nodes don't.

So we need to use data_ for the built-in nodes names,
and the sockets of the created node groups.

Pull Request #104889
2023-02-17 18:39:17 +01:00
Jacques Lucke
ff15edc6ab Cleanup: unify method parameters for virtual arrays
This makes `GVArrayImpl` and `VArrayImpl` more similar.
Only passing the pointer instead of the span also increases
efficiency a little bit. The downside is that a few asserts had
to be removed as well. However, in practice the same asserts
are in place at a higher level as well (in `VArrayCommon`).
2023-01-14 19:13:51 +01:00
Hans Goudey
dd9e1eded0 Mesh: Move sharp edge flag to generic attribute
Move the `ME_SHARP` flag for mesh edges to a generic boolean
attribute. This will help allow changing mesh edges to just a pair
of integers, giving performance improvements. In the future it could
also give benefits for normal calculation, which could more easily
check if all or no edges are marked sharp, which is helpful considering
the plans in T93551.

The attribute is generally only allocated when it's necessary. When
leaving edit mode, it will only be created if an edge is marked sharp.
The data can be edited with geometry nodes just like a regular edge
domain boolean attribute.

The attribute is named `sharp_edge`, aiming to reflect the similar
`select_edge` naming and to allow a future `sharp_face` name in
a separate commit.

Ref T95966

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16921
2023-01-10 16:12:14 -05:00
Martijn Versteegh
6c774feba2 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 01:01:43 -05:00
Hans Goudey
1af62cb3bf Mesh: Move positions to a generic attribute
**Changes**
As described in T93602, this patch removes all use of the `MVert`
struct, replacing it with a generic named attribute with the name
`"position"`, consistent with other geometry types.

Variable names have been changed from `verts` to `positions`, to align
with the attribute name and the more generic design (positions are not
vertices, they are just an attribute stored on the point domain).

This change is made possible by previous commits that moved all other
data out of `MVert` to runtime data or other generic attributes. What
remains is mostly a simple type change. Though, the type still shows up
859 times, so the patch is quite large.

One compromise is that now `CD_MASK_BAREMESH` now contains
`CD_PROP_FLOAT3`. With the general move towards generic attributes
over custom data types, we are removing use of these type masks anyway.

**Benefits**
The most obvious benefit is reduced memory usage and the benefits
that brings in memory-bound situations. `float3` is only 3 bytes, in
comparison to `MVert` which was 4. When there are millions of vertices
this starts to matter more.

The other benefits come from using a more generic type. Instead of
writing algorithms specifically for `MVert`, code can just use arrays
of vectors. This will allow eliminating many temporary arrays or
wrappers used to extract positions.

Many possible improvements aren't implemented in this patch, though
I did switch simplify or remove the process of creating temporary
position arrays in a few places.

The design clarity that "positions are just another attribute" brings
allows removing explicit copying of vertices in some procedural
operations-- they are just processed like most other attributes.

**Performance**
This touches so many areas that it's hard to benchmark exhaustively,
but I observed some areas as examples.
* The mesh line node with 4 million count was 1.5x (8ms to 12ms) faster.
* The Spring splash screen went from ~4.3 to ~4.5 fps.
* The subdivision surface modifier/node was slightly faster
RNA access through Python may be slightly slower, since now we need
a name lookup instead of just a custom data type lookup for each index.

**Future Improvements**
* Remove uses of "vert_coords" functions:
  * `BKE_mesh_vert_coords_alloc`
  * `BKE_mesh_vert_coords_get`
  * `BKE_mesh_vert_coords_apply{_with_mat4}`
* Remove more hidden copying of positions
* General simplification now possible in many areas
* Convert more code to C++ to use `float3` instead of `float[3]`
  * Currently `reinterpret_cast` is used for those C-API functions

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15982
2023-01-10 00:10:43 -05:00
Jacques Lucke
eedcf1876a Functions: introduce multi-function namespace
This moves all multi-function related code in the `functions` module
into a new `multi_function` namespace. This is similar to how there
is a `lazy_function` namespace.

The main benefit of this is that many types names that were prefixed
with `MF` (for "multi function") can be simplified.

There is also a common shorthand for the `multi_function` namespace: `mf`.
This is also similar to lazy-functions where the shortened namespace
is called `lf`.
2023-01-07 17:32:28 +01:00
Jacques Lucke
b3146200a8 Functions: refactor multi-function builder API
* New `build_mf` namespace for the multi-function builders.
* The type name of the created multi-functions is now "private",
  i.e. the caller has to use `auto`. This has the benefit that the
  implementation can change more freely without affecting
  the caller.
* `CustomMF` does not use `std::function` internally anymore.
  This reduces some overhead during code generation and at
  run-time.
* `CustomMF` now supports single-mutable parameters.
2023-01-07 16:19:59 +01:00
Jacques Lucke
2ffd08e952 Geometry Nodes: deterministic anonymous attribute lifetimes
Previously, the lifetimes of anonymous attributes were determined by
reference counts which were non-deterministic when multiple threads
are used. Now the lifetimes of anonymous attributes are handled
more explicitly and deterministically. This is a prerequisite for any kind
of caching, because caching the output of nodes that do things
non-deterministically and have "invisible inputs" (reference counts)
doesn't really work.

For more details for how deterministic lifetimes are achieved, see D16858.

No functional changes are expected. Small performance changes are expected
as well (within few percent, anything larger regressions should be reported as
bugs).

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16858
2023-01-05 14:05:30 +01:00
Hans Goudey
224d26fd33 Geometry Nodes: Parallelize reading and writing vertex groups
Reading or writing a vertex group is expensive enough that it's worth
parallelizing. On a Ryzen 3700x, in a grid of 250k vertices with
30 randomly assigned vertex groups (each to 10-50% of vertices),
I observed a 4x improvement for writing to a group and a 3x
improvement when reading their data. This significantly speeds
up nodes that create a new mesh from a mesh that had vertex groups.
2023-01-04 16:27:54 -05:00
Hans Goudey
58f1e62871 Geometry Nodes: Parallelize deleting vertex group
Since 78f28b55d3, allocating on multiple threads is much
faster, making it a nice improvement to parallelize vertex group
operations. This patch adds multi-threading when removing a
vertex group from the "Remove Named Attribute" node.

On a Ryzen 3700x:
Before: `(Average: 15.6 ms, Min: 15.0 ms)`
After: `(Average: 8.1 ms, Min: 7.6 ms)`

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16916
2023-01-04 12:20:32 -05:00
Hans Goudey
8c11c04448 Cleanup: Rename adjacent mesh loop accessors
But the common, more important part of the function names at the
beginning, to make them easier to find and more consistent.
2022-12-11 23:14:01 -06:00
Jacques Lucke
6d22aa2f84 Cleanup: simplify access to cached mesh normals 2022-12-02 13:12:06 +01:00
Hans Goudey
1ea169d90e Mesh: Move loose edge flag to a separate cache
As part of T95966, this patch moves loose edge information out of the
flag on each edge and into a new lazily calculated cache in mesh
runtime data. The number of loose edges is also cached, so further
processing can be skipped completely when there are no loose edges.

Previously the `ME_LOOSEEDGE` flag was updated on a "best effort"
basis. In order to be sure that it was correct, you had to be sure
to call `BKE_mesh_calc_edges_loose` first. Now the loose edge tag
is always correct. It also doesn't have to be calculated eagerly
in various places like the screw modifier where the complexity
wasn't worth the theoretical performance benefit.

The patch also adds a function to eagerly set the number of loose
edges to zero to avoid building the cache. This is used by various
primitive nodes, with the goal of improving drawing performance.
This results in a few ms shaved off extracting draw data for some
large meshes in my tests.

In the Python API, `MeshEdge.is_loose` is no longer editable.
No built-in addons set the value anyway. The upside is that
addons can be sure the data is correct based on the mesh.

**Tests**
There is one test failure in the Python OBJ exporter: `export_obj_cube`
that happens because of existing incorrect versioning. Opening the
file in master, all the edges were set to "loose", which is fixed
by this patch.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16504
2022-11-18 16:05:06 -06:00
Hans Goudey
a716e69658 Cleanup: Use helper function for previous mesh loop 2022-10-07 22:46:52 -05:00
Iliya Katueshenock
3d209d1619 Mesh: Multithread some boolean domain interpolation logic
This can improve performance by 3-10x in some simple test cases,
when reading a boolean attribute on a different domain from the
one it's stored on.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16054
2022-10-07 17:54:24 -05:00
Iliya Katueshenock
e89b2b1221 Mesh: Skip some domain interpolations for single values
Completely skip the work of interpolating domains for single values
for many to and from combinations. Similar to 535f50e5a6,
but slightly more complex because of the possibility of loose elements
on some mesh domains.

From D16054, with added comments.
2022-10-05 12:42:46 -05:00
Iliya Katueshenock
829569dccf Cleanup: Use generic array for mesh domain interpolation result
Instead of declaring a typed array inside the static type block.
This generates slightly less code and should have the same performance.

From D16054
2022-10-05 12:03:07 -05:00