The issue was that the `object_is_geometry` method was used in two different
contexts that expected the function to behave differently. So a recent change
that fixed `object_is_geometry` for one context, broke it for the other context.
The two contexts are:
* Check if a "real" object can contain a geometry to check if it has to be tagged
for sync after an update.
* Check if an object/instance actually is a geometry that cycles can work with.
I created a new `object_can_have_geometry` method for the first use case, instead
of trying to adapt the existing object_is_geometry method to serve both uses.
Additionally, I changed it so that a BObjectInfo is passed into `object_is_geometry`
to make it more explicit when this method is supposed to be used.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13135
Evaluated meshes from curves are presented to render engines as
separate instance objects now, just like evaluated meshes from other
object types like point clouds and volumes. For that reason, cycles
should not consider curve objects as geometry (previously it did,
meaning it retrieved a second mesh from the curve object as well
as the temporary evaluated mesh geometry).
Further, avoid adding a curve object's evaluated mesh as data_eval,
since that is special behavior for meshes that is arbitrary. Adding an
evaluated mesh there but not an evalauted pointcloud is arbitrary,
for example. Retrieve the evaluated mesh in from the geometry set
in BKE_object_get_evaluated_mesh now, to support that change.
This gets us closer to a place where all of an object's evaluated data
is stored in geometry_set_eval, and we just have helper functions
to access specific geometry components.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13118
The issue was that some geometries were not synced again even when
they changed. This commit adds a map that keeps track of the geometries
that need to be updated when an object has changed.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D13020
Remove prefix of filenames that is the same as the folder name. This used
to help when #includes were using individual files, but now they are always
relative to the cycles root directory and so the prefixes are redundant.
For patches and branches, git merge and rebase should be able to detect the
renames and move over code to the right file.