Check if either the memory is zero or already matches the default value,
and copy. This simplifies a common pattern to a single line.
Preparing for default initializers in DNA (#134531).
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/138830
This patch adds a new `BLI_mutex.hh` header which adds `blender::Mutex` as alias
for either `tbb::mutex` or `std::mutex` depending on whether TBB is enabled.
Description copied from the patch:
```
/**
* blender::Mutex should be used as the default mutex in Blender. It implements a subset of the API
* of std::mutex but has overall better guaranteed properties. It can be used with RAII helpers
* like std::lock_guard. However, it is not compatible with e.g. std::condition_variable. So one
* still has to use std::mutex for that case.
*
* The mutex provided by TBB has these properties:
* - It's as fast as a spin-lock in the non-contended case, i.e. when no other thread is trying to
* lock the mutex at the same time.
* - In the contended case, it spins a couple of times but then blocks to avoid draining system
* resources by spinning for a long time.
* - It's only 1 byte large, compared to e.g. 40 bytes when using the std::mutex of GCC. This makes
* it more feasible to have many smaller mutexes which can improve scalability of algorithms
* compared to using fewer larger mutexes. Also it just reduces "memory slop" across Blender.
* - It is *not* a fair mutex, i.e. it's not guaranteed that a thread will ever be able to lock the
* mutex when there are always more than one threads that try to lock it. In the majority of
* cases, using a fair mutex just causes extra overhead without any benefit. std::mutex is not
* guaranteed to be fair either.
*/
```
The performance benchmark suggests that the impact is negilible in almost
all cases. The only benchmarks that show interesting behavior are the once
testing foreach zones in Geometry Nodes. These tests are explicitly testing
overhead, which I still have to reduce over time. So it's not unexpected that
changing the mutex has an impact there. What's interesting is that on macos the
performance improves a lot while on linux it gets worse. Since that overhead
should eventually be removed almost entirely, I don't really consider that
blocking.
Links:
* Documentation of different mutex flavors in TBB:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/docs/onetbb/developer-guide-api-reference/2021-12/mutex-flavors.html
* Older implementation of a similar mutex by me:
https://archive.blender.org/developer/differential/0016/0016711/index.html
* Interesting read regarding how a mutex can be this small:
https://webkit.org/blog/6161/locking-in-webkit/
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/138370
This adds a version of `BKE_id_new_nomain` that takes the ID type parameter as
template argument. This allows the function the return the newly created ID with
the correct type, removing the need to use `static_cast` on the call-site.
To make this work, I added a static `id_type` member to every ID struct. This
can also be used to create a similar API for other id management functions in
future patches.
```cpp
// Old
Mesh *mesh = static_cast<Mesh *>(BKE_id_new_nomain(ID_ME, "Mesh"));
// New
Mesh *mesh = BKE_id_new_nomain<Mesh>("Mesh");
```
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/138383
- ImBuf reference counting: turn that into just an atomic integer
- Cachefile safety: turn into a mutex, since work under the spinlock
was quite heavy (hashtable creation, other memory allocations)
- Movie clip editor: turn into a mutex, since work under the spinlock
was very heavy (reading files from disk, etc.)
- Mesh intersect: remove the previously commented out spinlock path;
replace BLI mutex with C++ mutex for shorter code
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/137989
The goal here is to avoid having to cast to and from `ID` when getting the
evaluated or original ID using the depsgraph API, which is often verbose and not
type safe. To solve this, there are now `DEG_get_original` and
`DEG_get_evaluated` methods which are templated on the type and use a new
`is_ID_v` static type check to make sure it's only used with valid types.
This allows removing quite some verbosity on all the call sites. I also removed
`DEG_get_original_object`, because that does not have to be a special case
anymore.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/137629
The main issue of 'type-less' standard C allocations is that there is no check on
allocated type possible.
This is a serious source of annoyance (and crashes) when making some
low-level structs non-trivial, as tracking down all usages of these
structs in higher-level other structs and their allocation is... really
painful.
MEM_[cm]allocN<T> templates on the other hand do check that the
given type is trivial, at build time (static assert), which makes such issue...
trivial to catch.
NOTE: New code should strive to use MEM_new (i.e. allocation and
construction) as much as possible, even for trivial PoD types.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/136134
Move `Library.runtime` to be a pointer, move the related
`LibraryRuntime` struct to `BKE_library.hh`. Similar to e.g.
Mesh.runtime, that pointer is expected to always be valid, and is
allocated at readtime or when creating a new Library ID.
Related smaller changes:
* Write code now uses standard ID writing codepath for Library IDs too.
* Runtime pointer is reset to nullptr before writing.
* Looking up a library by its absolute path is now handled through a
dedicated utils, `search_filepath_abs`, instead of using
`BLI_findstring`.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/134188
Previously, values for `ID.flag` and `ID.tag` used the prefixes `LIB_` and
`LIB_TAG` respectively. This was somewhat confusing because it's not really
related to libraries in general. This patch changes the prefix to `ID_FLAG_` and
`ID_TAG_`. This makes it more obvious what they correspond to, simplifying code.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/125811
This makes the read and write API functions match more closely, and adds
asserts to check that the data size is as expected.
There are still a few places remaining that use BLO_read_data_address
and similar generic functions, these should eventually be replaced as well.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/120994
Seems to work OK in basic cases, but needs more work when copying
outside of Main at least.
Note: There is no behavioral changes expected from this commit.
Note that there are at least two known usecases for this change:
* Liboverrides, as with recursive resync and proxies conversion it
often ends up creating 'virtual' linked data that does not actually
exists in the library blend files.
* Complex versionning code (`do_versions_after_setup`) when it needs
to create new IDs (currently handling linked data that way is just not
supported!).
Implements #107847.
The depsgraph CoW mechanism is a bit of a misnomer. It creates an
evaluated copy for data-blocks regardless of whether the copy will
actually be written to. The point is to have physical separation between
original and evaluated data. This is in contrast to the commonly used
performance improvement of keeping a user count and copying data
implicitly when it needs to be changed. In Blender code we call this
"implicit sharing" instead. Importantly, the dependency graph has no
idea about the _actual_ CoW behavior in Blender.
Renaming this functionality in the despgraph removes some of the
confusion that comes up when talking about this, and will hopefully
make the depsgraph less confusing to understand initially too. Wording
like "the evaluated copy" (as opposed to the original data-block) has
also become common anyway.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/118338
This data was 'hidden' away in a util in
`lib_query.cc`, which made it hard to discover and keep up-to-date.
However, as shown by e.g. #108407, critical low-level features in ID
management code, such as remapping, now rely on this information being
valid.
Also simplify `BKE_library_id_can_use_filter_id` and
`BKE_library_id_can_use_idtype` to make them more generic, relying on
IDTypeInfo to retrieve IDtype-specific info.
No behavioral changes expected here.
Translation markers `N_()` were added to IDs' plural names in !113912.
I also renamed some of those because I thought there were only display
names.
This commit reverts the renaming, leaving only the addition of the
markers.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/114030
Extract:
- Sculpt filter types from the Sculpt menu. Some of these types use a
custom label, different from those defined in the operator RNA,
which was never extracted.
- "Today" and "Yesterday" from the file browser modification date.
- All name_plural from IDs, as these are used in the UI to list which
data block is to be removed, when calling outliner.orphans_purge.
Disambiguate:
- "Area", meaning the measurement of a surface as opposed to a place.
Some messages reported by Satoshi Yamasaki in #43295.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/113912
The `lib_link` callback cannot always be fully replaced/removed, as in
some case it is also doing some validation checks, or data editing based
on the result of lib_linking internal ID pointers.
The callback has been renamed for that purpose, from `read_lib` to
`read_after_liblink`. It is now called after all ID pointers have been
fully lib-linked for the current ID, but still before the call to
`do_versions_after_linking`.
This change should not have any behavioral effect. Although in theory
the side-effect of this commit (to split lib linking itself, and the
validation/further processing code) into two completely separated steps
could have some effects, in practice none are expected, and tests did
not show any changes in behavior either..
Part of implementing #105134: Removal of readfile's lib_link & expand code.
The `expand` callback is 'trivial' to replace, since it is only iterating
over ID pointers and calling a callback.
The only change in behavior here is that some pointers that were not
processed previously will now be.
In practice this is not expected to have any real effect (usually
the IDs used by these pointers would have been expanded through other
usages anyway). But it may solve a few corner cases, undocumented issues
though.
Part of implementing #105134: Removal of readfile's lib_link & expand code.
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.
There is no reason at all for each ID read/write callbacks to have to
deal with this generic, common data explicitely. Generic ID read/write
code is the place to handle such data (just like asset, liboverride,
etc. data are handled already).
Note behavioral change expected here.
Also see #103343.
Couldn't move two files yet:
* `softbody.c`: The corresponding regression test fails. It seems like the
conversion to C++ changes floating point accuracy, but it's not clear where that happens exactly.
* `writeffmpeg.c`: Is a bit more complex to convert because of the static array in `av_err2str`.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110182