The derivatives of the normal were simply not computed.
The offsetted normals are computed by perturbating the barycentric
coordinates. At triangle boundaries, the normals are extrapolated,
so discontinuities might be visible.
Currently only supported on triangles.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/133769
- Rename dx/dy -> dfdx/dfdy to match the actual computed quantity
- Add template functions to compute dfdx/dfdy on triangles for sharing
among different data types
- Add documentation to some functions
- Some code shuffling that makes it easier to scale dfdx/dfdy in the
future
- Some other trivial changes
The issue here is that originally, the step count for the geometry's
motion and the object transform's motion were tied together, so a
single variable is used to store that step count.
However, when using the velocity attribute, it's possible for the step
counts to differ, which will lead to an incorrect interpolated object
transform in the kernel.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/133788
Check was misc-const-correctness, combined with readability-isolate-declaration
as suggested by the docs.
Temporarily clang-format "QualifierAlignment: Left" was used to get consistency
with the prevailing order of keywords.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/132361
* Use .empty() and .data()
* Use nullptr instead of 0
* No else after return
* Simple class member initialization
* Add override for virtual methods
* Include C++ instead of C headers
* Remove some unused includes
* Use default constructors
* Always use braces
* Consistent names in definition and declaration
* Change typedef to using
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/132361
Fixes missing intersections on straight 3D curves with the
Metal backend, with BVH2.
This issue could of manifested on other devices, but didn't seem to
in practice.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/126197
I ran into this in a test scene - somehow the normalization here can result
in NaN (so presumably a zero vector). I don't think this has a notable
performance impact from some basic tests.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/125930
Light linking was never working correctly in volume segment with light
tree, because `sd->object` was not assigned, thus
`light_link_receiver_nee(kg, sd)` always returned `OBJECT_NONE`, causing
the light tree sample to fail. This problem was revealed by fdc2962beb
since now the same light is used for volume segment and volume.
Also ensure we don't sample position on the light if sampling from
volume segment is failed, by setting `emitter_id` to `EMITTER_NONE` in
such cases.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/122999
This PR fixes the (currently unused) scene-based selective feature compilation macros. These feature based macros haven't been used for a few years, and enabling them currently results in compilation errors.
The only functional change in this PR is in geom/primitive.h where undef-ing `__HAIR__` had exposed an inconsistency in how pointcloud attributes were being fetched. Using the more general `primitive_surface_attribute_float4` (instead of `curve_attribute_float4`) fixed a compilation error that occurred when rendering pointcloud unit test scenes with adaptive compilation enabled.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/121216
Global built-ins appear to not work on AMD cards.
Also add a tweak to avoid a performance regression, similar
to what was done before. Disable adaptive subdivision kernel
code if not used.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/119175
Along with the 4.1 libraries upgrade, we are bumping the clang-format
version from 8-12 to 17. This affects quite a few files.
If not already the case, you may consider pointing your IDE to the
clang-format binary bundled with the Blender precompiled libraries.
`sd->type` was set to `PRIMITIVE_TRIANGLE` when it should be
`PRIMITIVE_LAMP`.
Function #lights_intersect_impl sets `isect->prim` to `lamp`, which is
passed to function #shader_setup_from_sample. There `prim != PRIM_NONE`
is evaluated to `true`, thus setting `sd->type` to `PRIMITIVE_TRIANGLE`
erroneously. This fix checks `lamp != LAMP_NONE` first, as in all other
usages of #shader_setup_from_sample `LAMP_NONE` is passed as the value
of `lamp`.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/108769
This is added so that some texture pipeline with point light and spot
light could work as before. Some people use the Normal socket from
Texture Coordinate node for texturing light, however the Normal there is
actually the incoming light direction and should be corrected. Using the
Parametric socket from Geometry node + normal transform from world to
object with Vector Transform node delivers the same result as using the
Normal socket from Texture Coordinate node.
Currently for lights only normal transformation works, because only
there we fetch light transform properly. This is a confusing behaviour,
but testing if it's a lamp in all relevant functions could have bad
impact on the performance. A more proper solution would be to change
lights to real objects, which is planned for the future.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/108666
Barycentric coordinate convention was changed at some point, which is
reflected in `motion_triangle_shader.h` (1c2c468abc) but not in
`motion_triangle.h`, this is also fixed by sharing functions between the
two header files.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/106629
To improve mesh upload speeds and reduce the size of the scene data which allows larger scenes to be rendered.
The meshes in Cycles are currently stored as flattened meshes, where each triangle is stored as a set of 3 vertices. Unflattening writes out the vertices in a list according to the index buffer. This uses a lot of memory and for current hardware does not provide a noticeable benefit. This change unflattens the mesh by directly using the meshes vertex and index buffers directly and skips the unflattening. This change allows for larger scenes and also a reduction in the sizes of the meshes. Further it results in a decrease the amount of time it takes to upload the data to a GPU. This is especially important for when multiple GPUs are used in a single machine.
Pull Request #105173
wi is the viewing direction, and wo is the illumination direction. Under this notation, BSDF sampling always samples from wi and outputs wo, which is consistent with most of the papers and mitsuba. This order is reversed compared with PBRT, although PBRT also traces from the camera.
When rendering in the viewport (or probably on instanced objects, but I didn't
test that), emissive objects whose scale is negative give the wrong value on the
"backfacing" input when multiple sampling is enabled.
The underlying problem was a corner case in how normal transformation is handled,
which is generally a bit messy.
From what I can tell, the pattern appears to be:
- If you first transform vertices to world space and then compute the normal from
them (as triangle light samping, MNEE and light tree do), you need to flip
whenever the transform has negative scale regardless of whether the transform
has been applied
- If you compute the normal in object space and then transform it to world space
(as the regular shader_setup_from_ray path does), you only need to flip if the
transform was already applied and was negative
- If you get the normal from a local intersection result (as bevel and SSS do),
you only need to flip if the transform was already applied and was negative
- If you get the normal from vertex normals, you don't need to do anything since
the host-side code does the flip for you (arguably it'd be more consistent to
do this in the kernel as well, but meh, not worth the potential slowdown)
So, this patch fixes the logic in the triangle emission code.
Also, turns out that the MNEE code had the same problem and was also having
problems in the viewport on negative-scale objects, this is also fixed now.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16952
Cleans up the file structure to be more similar to that of the SVM
and also makes it possible to build kernels with OSL support, but
without having to include SVM support.
This patch was split from D15902.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15949
The SVM attribute map is always generated and uses a simple
linear search to lookup by an opaque ID, so can reuse that for OSL
as well and simply use the attribute name hash as ID instead of
generating a unique value separately. This works for both object
and geometry attributes since the SVM attribute map already
stores both. Simplifies code somewhat and reduces memory
usage slightly.
This patch was split from D15902.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15918
* Store compact ray differentials in ShaderData and compute full differentials
on demand. This reduces register pressure on the GPU.
* Remove BSDF differential code that was effectively doing nothing as the
differential orientation was discarded when making it compact.
This gives a 1-5% speedup with RTX A6000 + OptiX in our benchmarks, with the
bigger speedups in simpler scenes.
Renders appear to be identical except for the Both displacement option that
does both displacement and bump.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15677
Simplifies intersection code a little and slightly improves precision regarding
self intersection.
The parametric texture coordinate in shader nodes is still the same as before
for compatibility.
All our intersections functions now work with unnormalized ray direction,
which means we no longer need to transform ray distance between world and
object space, they can all remain in world space.
There doesn't seem to be any real performance difference one way or the
other, but it does simplify the code.
For transparency, volume and light intersection rays, adjust these distances
rather than the ray start position. This way we increment the start distance
by the smallest possible float increment to avoid self intersections, and be
sure it works as the distance compared to be will be exactly the same as
before, due to the ray start position and direction remaining the same.
Fix T98764, T96537, hair ray tracing precision issues.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15455
This change helps decrease Intel GPU binaries compile time by 5-10
minutes without impacting other backends.
Reviewed By: sergey, brecht
Differential Revision: http://developer.blender.org/D15273
This patch unifies the names of math functions for different data types and uses
overloading instead. The goal is to make it possible to swap out all the float3
variables containing RGB data with something else, with as few as possible
changes to the code. It's a requirement for future spectral rendering patches.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15276
* Rename "texture" to "data array". This has not used textures for a long time,
there are just global memory arrays now. (On old CUDA GPUs there was a cache
for textures but not global memory, so we used to put all data in textures.)
* For CUDA and HIP, put globals in KernelParams struct like other devices.
* Drop __ prefix for data array names, no possibility for naming conflict now that
these are in a struct.