* Added a node to convert a temperature in Kelvin to an RGB color. This can be used e.g. for lights, to easily find the right color temperature.
= Some common temperatures =
Candle light: 1500 Kelvin
Sunset/Sunrise: 1850 Kelvin
Studio lamps: 3200 Kelvin
Horizon daylight: 5000 Kelvin
Documentation: http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Doc:2.6/Manual/Render/Cycles/Nodes/More#Blackbody
Thanks to Philipp Oeser (lichtwerk), who essentially contributed to this with a patch! :)
This is part of my GSoC 2013 project. SVN merge of r57424, r57487, r57507, r57525, r58253 and r58774
* Added a Ray Depth output to the Light Path node, which gives the user access to the current bounce.
This can be used to limit the maximum ray bounce on a per shader basis. Another use case is to restrict light influence with this, to have a lamp only contribute to the direct lighting.
http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Doc:2.6/Manual/Render/Cycles/Nodes/More#Light_Path
This is part of my GSoC 2013 project. SVN merge of r58091 and r58772 from soc-2013-dingto.
* Avoid check for !LABEL_TRANSPARENT in "kernel_path_non_progressive_lighting", transparency is either handled in the outer loop or in the "kernel_path_indirect" function, but not here.
* Increase the maximum amount of closures per shader from 16 to 64, so more complex closure trees can be rendered.
I measured performance on CPU and GPU (Geforce 540M) and couldn't find a performance impact, but if someone encounters a noticeable impact on his system, please report.
* Reshuffle SSE #ifdefs to try to avoid compilation errors enabling SSE on 32 bit.
* Remove CUDA kernel launch size exception on Mac, is not needed.
* Make OSL file compilation quiet like c/cpp files.
* Add CUDA compiler version detection to cmake/scons/runtime
* Remove noinline in kernel_shader.h and reenable --use_fast_math if CUDA 5.x
is used, these were workarounds for CUDA 4.2 bugs
* Change max number of registers to 32 for sm 2.x (based on performance tests
from Martijn Berger and confirmed here), and also for NVidia OpenCL.
Overall it seems that with these changes and the latest CUDA 5.0 download, that
performance is as good as or better than the 2.67b release with the scenes and
graphics cards I tested.
On the BMW scene, this gives roughly a 10% speedup overall with clang/gcc, and 30%
speedup with visual studio (2008). It turns out visual studio was optimizing the
existing code quite poorly compared to pretty good autovectorization by clang/gcc,
but hand written SSE code also gives a smaller speed boost there.
This code isn't enabled when using the hair minimum width feature yet, need to
make that work with the SSE code still.
and sm_30 cards, so hopefully it should all work now.
Also includes some warnings fixes related to nvcc compiler arguments, should make
no difference otherwise.
* Added a node to convert wavelength (in nanometers, from 380nm to 780nm) to RGB values. This can be useful to match real world colors easier.
* Code cleanup:
** Moved color functions (xyz and hsv) into dedicated utility files.
** Remove svm_lerp(), use interp() instead.
Documentation:
http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Doc:2.6/Manual/Render/Cycles/Nodes/More#Wavelength
Example render:
http://www.pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=53202
This is part of my GSoC 2013. (revisions 57322, 57326, 57335 and 57367 from soc-2013-dingto).
to be done in cycles itself to keep compatibility for bytecode too.
Also fix broken button to compile OSL from the text editors, this got broken after
recent change to disable editing of library linked nodes.
* Added a node to convert wavelength (in nanometer, from 380nm to 780nm) to RGB values. This can be useful to match real world colors easier.
Example render:
http://www.pasteall.org/pic/show.php?id=53202
ToDo:
* Move some functions into an util file, maybe a common util_color.h or so.
* Test GPU, unfortunately sm_21 doesn't work for me yet.
multiple importance sampling, so you can disable them for diffuse/glossy/transmission.
The Light Path node here is still weak and does not give this info. To make that
work we'd need to evaluate the shader multiple times which is slow and we can't
detect well enough when it is actually needed.
instead of sobol. So far one doesn't seem to be consistently better or worse than
the other for the same number of samples but more testing is needed.
The random number generator itself is slower than sobol for most number of samples,
except 16, 64, 256, .. because they can be computed faster. This can probably be
optimized, but we can do that when/if this actually turns out to be useful.
Paper this implementation is based on:
http://graphics.pixar.com/library/MultiJitteredSampling/
Also includes some refactoring of RNG code, fixing a Sobol correlation issue with
the first BSDF and < 16 samples, skipping some unneeded RNG calls and using a
simpler unit square to unit disk function.
* Revert r57203 (len() renaming)
There seems to be a problem with nVidia OpenCL after this and I haven't figured out the real cause yet.
Better to selectively enable native length() later, after figuring out what's wrong.
This fixes [#35612].
* Rename some math functions:
len -> length
len_squared -> length_squared
normalize_len -> normalize_length
* This way OpenCL uses its inbuilt length() function, rather than our own. The other two functions have been renamed for consistency.
* Tested CPU, CUDA and OpenCL compile, should be no functional changes.
* Cycles Mix closure could render strange effects, when the user entered a value out of the 0...1 range. This was already clamped for OSL, clamp for SVM as well.