There's quite a few libraries that depend on dna_type_offsets.h
but had gotten to it by just adding the folder that contains it to
their includes INC section without declaring a dependency to
bf_dna in the LIB section.
which occasionally lead to the lib building before bf_dna and the
header being missing, while this generally gets fixed in CMake by
adding bf_dna to the LIB section of the lib, however until last
week all libraries in the LIB section were linked as INTERFACE so
adding it in there did not resolve the build issue.
To make things still build, we sprinkled add_dependencies wherever
we needed it to force a build order.
This diff :
Declares public include folders for the bf_dna target so there's
no more fudging the INC section required to get to them.
Removes all dna related paths from the INC section for all
libraries.
Adds an alias target bf:dna to signify it has been updated to
modern cmake
Declares a dependency on bf::dna for all libraries that require it
Removes (almost) all calls to add_dependencies for bf_dna
Future work:
Because of the manual dependency management that was done, there is
now some "clutter" with libs depending on bf_dna that realistically
don't. Example bf_intern_opencolorio itself has no dependency on
bf_dna at all, doesn't need it, doesn't use it. However the
dna include folder had been added to it in the past since bf_blenlib
uses dna headers in some of its public headers and
bf_intern_opencolorio does use those blenlib headers.
Given bf_blenlib now correctly declares the dependency on bf_dna
as public bf_intern_opencolorio will get the dna header directory
automatically from CMake, hence some cleanup could be done for
bf_intern_opencolorio
Because 99% of the changes in this diff have been automated, this diff
does not seek to address these issues as there is no easy way to
determine why a certain dependency is in place. A developer will have
to make a pass a this at some later point in time. As I'd rather not
mix automated and manual labour.
There are a few libraries that could not be automatically processed
(ie bf_blendthumb) that also will need this manual look-over.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109835
Also see #103343.
There was one unusual complication due to `openvdb` here. The `BKE_volume.h`
header included `openvdb` but that would not link correctly in rna code. I'm not entirely
sure why any of the openvdb code is actually instantiated, may be an issue in the
`openvdb` headers. The solution is to create a new header that gives access to the
underlying `openvdb` data structure for a `Volume` geometry. This header can't be
included in rna for now, until the linking issues are resolved.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109508
Similar to curves, the ".selection" attribute is used to store selection.
Selection isn't visualized in the viewport yet, but this should be added
at some point anywya. See f89b32382a.
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
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/
The issue was that `is_rendering` was used as a proxy to check
whether the interface is locked. Locking the node editor during rendering
is not necessary, but it currently is necessary while baking, because
baking changes original data from a different thread.
The solution is to use the already existing mechanism to tell Blender
which regions should be locked when the interface is locked.
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
The usage of the lib pointer was cryptic to say the least, it was
essentialy used to allow or not local IDs results in the mapping
old_id_pointer -> new_id_pointer lookup result.
Now:
- Explicitely pass a boolean to allow or not local ID as result in
lower-level code.
- Pass the 'self ID' pointer instead of its library to the whole
liblinking code (that was already the case in a few places).
Note that naming of the 'self id' pointer is currently very inconsistent
throughout the readfile liblink code, this will have to be cleaned up in
a separate step later. For now, `self_id` has been chosen for new code
as it matches the terminology in lib_query code.
The later change can also allow finer handling of lookup on undo, based
on how it was re-read (or not), should the need for this arise.
Fixes crashes in timeline and spreadsheet editors during simulation
nodes baking:
* Timeline tries to access the `states_at_frames_` list of the cache to
determine which frames to draw as baked. This can collide with the
baking thread. Needs a mutex to safely access the cache state.
Note: the old point cache has a pre-allocated flag array
`cached_frames` which the baking thread writes into while timeline is
reading it concurrently - not thread-safe but harmless.
* Spreadsheet keeps a data pointer during drawing, which may become
deallocated when the cache is updated. Common approach here is to use
`G.is_rendering` to lock the editor while baking.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/107621
Use bl_run_operators to detect cases when operators would crash
when run in an expected context for the following operators:
- GIZMOGROUP_OT_gizmo_select
- GIZMOGROUP_OT_gizmo_tweak
- GPENCIL_OT_time_segment_move
- OBJECT_OT_add_named
- OBJECT_OT_data_instance_add
- OBJECT_OT_drop_named_material
- SCULPT_OT_mask_by_color
- SEQUENCER_OT_delete
- SEQUENCER_OT_rename_channel
- SEQUENCER_OT_retiming_handle_move
- SPREADSHEET_OT_change_spreadsheet_data_source
- UI_OT_drop_color
Note that some of these situations users were unlikely to encounter,
however there were cases script authors could run into such as deleting
sequence strips without a region or masking by color without a 3D view.
Node socket tooltips suffered from several issues.
- Some could not be translated because they were not properly
extracted, so extraction macros were added.
- Some were extracted but included newlines at the end which did not
get translated, such as `ss << TIP_("Geometry:\n")`, changed to
`ss << TIP_("Geometry:") << "\n"`.
- Some translations were not functional, such as:
`TIP_(attributes_num == 1 ? " Named Attribute" : " Named Attributes");`
because `TIP_()` needs to be around a single string.
- Some extraction macros had no effect and were removed, such as:
`.description(N_(leading_out_description));`
This is a no-op macro which can be used only around a string literal.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/107257
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
This type will be used to store mesh edges in #106638, but it could
be used for anything else too. This commit adds support for:
- The new type in the Python API
- Editing the type in the edit mode "Attribute Set" operator
- Rendering the type in EEVEE and Cycles for all geometry types
- Geometry nodes attribute interpolation and mixing
- Viewing the type in the spreadsheet and using row filters
The attribute uses the `blender::int2` type in most code, and
the `vec2i` DNA type in C code when necessary. The enum names
are based on `INT32_2D` for consistency with `INT8` and `INT32`.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/106677
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
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
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
The Cycles light linking branch is using the tree view UI but it seemed
to use the "wrong" layout. It wasn't clear that the layout has to be
reactivated before building the view.
Make it harder to use the API wrong now by requiring the layout as
argument, so the building can ensure it's active.
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
Increase the buffer sizes used for `BLI_str_format_uint64_grouped` to
prevent overflow on strings representing numbers within the uint64
range. Also creates and uses defines for all the formatted string
buffer sizes.
Pull Request #105263
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.
Straightforward port. I took the oportunity to remove some C vector
functions (ex: copy_v2_v2).
This makes some changes to DRWView to accomodate the alignement
requirements of the float4x4 type.
Straightforward port. I took the oportunity to remove some C vector
functions (ex: `copy_v2_v2`).
This makes some changes to DRWView to accomodate the alignement
requirements of the float4x4 type.
These warnings can reveal errors in logic, so quiet them by checking
if the features are enabled before using variables or by assigning
empty strings in some cases.
- Check CMAKE_THREAD_LIBS_INIT is set before use as CMake docs
note that this may be left unset if it's not needed.
- Remove BOOST/OPENVDB/VULKAN references when disable.
- Define INC_SYS even when empty.
- Remove PNG_INC from freetype (not defined anywhere).
Use the same `".selection"` attribute for both curve and point domains,
instead of a different name for each. The attribute can now have
either boolean or float type. Some tools create boolean selections.
Other tools create float selections. Some tools "upgrade" the attribute
from boolean to float.
Edit mode tools that create selections from scratch can create boolean
selections, but edit mode should generally be able to handle both
selection types. Sculpt mode should be able to read boolean selections,
but can also and write float values between zero and one.
Theoretically we could just always use floats to store selections,
but the type-agnosticism doesn't cost too much complexity given the
existing APIs for dealing with it, and being able to use booleans is
clearer in edit mode, and may allow future optimizations like more
efficient ways to store boolean attributes.
The attribute API is usually used directly for accessing the selection
attribute. We rely on implicit type conversion and domain interpolation
to simplify the rest of the code.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16057