- Adds tint control, which simulates volumetric absorption inside the coating.
This results in angle-dependent saturation and affects all underlying layers
(diffuse, subsurface, metallic, transmission). It provides a physically-based
alternative to ad-hoc effects such as tinted specular highlights.
- Renames the component from "Clearcoat" to "Coat", since it's no longer
necessarily clear now. This matches naming in e.g. other renderers or OpenPBR.
- Adds an explicit Coat IOR input, in preparation for future smarter IOR logic
around the interaction between Coat and main IOR. This used to be hardcoded
to 1.5.
- Removes hardcoded 0.25 weight multiplier, and adds versioning code to update
existing files accordingly. OBJ import/export still applies the factor.
- Replaces the GTR1 microfacet component with regular GGX. This removes a corner
case in the Microfacet code, solves #53038, and makes us more consistent with
other standard surface shaders. The original Disney BSDF used GTR1, but it
doesn't appear that it caught on in the industry.
Co-authored-by: Weizhen Huang <weizhen@blender.org>
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110993
Pull request #109518 (commit cf5666345d) added logic to rename the
active UV map to "st". However, this behavior is currently breaking
UV Map node export to USD Preview Surface materials.
Specifically, UV Map nodes that reference the original active map name
do not get updated to use the new name "st", and the exported USD shader
references an invalid texture coordinate primvar.
This commit removes this logic for now. We should support such
renaming in the future, but the behavior should be extended to update
the relevant UV Map nodes with the new name. Also, we should consider
adding a USD export option to enable this feature.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/112234
There are a couple of functions that create rna pointers. For example
`RNA_main_pointer_create` and `RNA_pointer_create`. Currently, those
take an output parameter `r_ptr` as last argument. This patch changes
it so that the functions actually return a` PointerRNA` instead of using
the output parameters.
This has a few benefits:
* Output parameters should only be used when there is an actual benefit.
Otherwise, one should default to returning the value.
* It's simpler to use the API in the large majority of cases (note that this
patch reduces the number of lines of code).
* It allows the `PointerRNA` to be const on the call-site, if that is desired.
No performance regression has been measured in production files.
If one of these functions happened to be called in a hot loop where
there is a regression, the solution should be to use an inline function
there which allows the compiler to optimize it even better.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111976
The hash tables and vector blenlib headers were pulling many more
headers than they actually need, including the C base math header,
our C string API header, and the StringRef header. All of this
potentially slows down compilation and polutes autocomplete
with unrelated information.
Also remove the `ListBase` constructor for `Vector`. It wasn't used
much, and making it easy to use `ListBase` isn't worth it for the
same reasons mentioned above.
It turns out a lot of files depended on indirect includes of
`BLI_string.h` and `BLI_listbase.h`, so those are fixed here.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111801
This reverts commit 074dbf08cd.
This change caused PLY and OBJ tests not to compile,
even with the identifiers updated some OBJ tests fails
with different rotation values.
This helps to document standard behavior, improves type
safety, reduces code duplication, and gets us closer to being
able to remove some of the older C math API.
The `EdgeHash` and `EdgeSet` data structures are designed specifically
as a hash of an order agnostic pair of integers. This specialization can
be achieved much more easily with the templated C++ data structures,
which gives improved performance, readability, and type safety.
This PR removes the older data structures and replaces their use with
`Map`, `Set`, or `VectorSet` depending on the situation. The changes
are mostly straightforward, but there are a few places where the old
API made the goals of the code confusing.
The last time these removed data structures were significantly changed,
they were already moving closer to the implementation of the newer
C++ data structures (aa63a87d37).
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111391
Armature layers (the 32 little dots) and bone groups are replaced with
Bone Collections:
- Bone collections are stored on the armature, and have a name that is
unique within that armature.
- An armature can have an arbitrary number of bone collections (instead
of the fixed 32 layers).
- Bones can be assigned to zero or more bone collections.
- Bone collections have a visibility setting, just like objects in scene
collections.
- When a bone is in at least one collection, and all its collections in
are hidden, the bone is hidden. In other cases (in any visible
collection, or in no collection at all), the bone visibility is
determined by its own 'hidden' flag.
- For now, bone collections cannot be nested; they are a flat list just
like bone groups were. Nestability of bone collections is intended to
be implemented in a later 4.x release.
- Since bone collections are defined on the armature, they can be used
from both pose mode and edit mode.
Versioning converts bone groups and armature layers to new bone
collections. Layers that do not contain any bones are skipped. The old
data structures remain in DNA and are unaltered, for limited forward
compatibility. That way at least a save with Blender 4.0 will not
immediately erase the bone group and armature layers and their bone
assignments.
Shortcuts:
- M/Shift+M in pose/edit mode: move to collection (M) and add to
collection (shift+M). This works similar to the M/Shift+M menus for
objects & scene collections.
- Ctrl+G in pose mode shows a port of the old 'bone groups' menu. This
is likely to be removed in the near future, as the functionality
overlaps with the M/Shift+M menus.
This is the first commit of a series; the bone collections feature will
be improved before the Blender 4.0 release. See #108941 for more info.
Pull request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109976
- Copy positions with a single copy for the entire array
- Use a utility function to copy face sizes
- Use simple copy for corner vertex indices instead of face iteration
This was noted in code comments and checked in Python documentation
generation but not at build time.
Since these enums are identifiers that end up included in various places
enforce the `rna_enum_*_items` convention which was noted as
the convention but not followed strictly.
Partially reverts [0], avoids having to deal with multiple prefix types.
[0]: 3ea7117ed1
This fixes a bug where only the time sample for the first frame
is written to a USD animation.
Replaced the hard-coded USDExporterContext::time_code value with a
USDExporterContext::get_time_code function wrapper which is called
from USDAbstractWriter::get_export_time_code() to query the current
frame when writing an animation.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111248
Had put my name here since the choice was between the foundation
and me personally, with the blender authors file now being in
place this can be cleaned up.
Added support for UsdSkel animation import.
This addresses #110076.
Added USDSkeletonReader class which imports UsdSkelSkeleton primitives
as armatures.
Extended USDMeshReader to import UsdSkelBlendShape as shape keys.
Extended USDMeshReader to import USD skinning data as as deform groups
and an armature modifier on the mesh object.
Added USDMeshReader::get_local_usd_xform() to override the transform
computation to account for the binding transformation for skinned meshes.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/110912
Include counts of some headers while making full blender build:
- BLI_color.hh 1771 -> 1718
- BLI_math_color.h 1828 -> 1783
- BLI_math_vector.hh 496 -> 405
- BLI_index_mask.hh 1341 -> 1267
- BLI_task.hh 958 -> 903
- BLI_generic_virtual_array.hh 509 -> 435
- IMB_colormanagement.h 437 -> 130
- GPU_texture.h 806 -> 780
- FN_multi_function.hh 331 -> 257
Note: DNA_node_tree_interface_types.h needs color include only
for the currently unused (but soon to be used) socket_color function.
Future step is to figure out how to include
DNA_node_tree_interface_types.h less.
Pull Request: #111113
Including <iostream> or similar headers is quite expensive, since it
also pulls in things like <locale> and so on. In many BLI headers,
iostreams are only used to implement some sort of "debug print",
or an operator<< for ostream.
Change some of the commonly used places to instead include <iosfwd>,
which is the standard way of forward-declaring iostreams related
classes, and move the actual debug-print / operator<< implementations
into .cc files.
This is not done for templated classes though (it would be possible
to provide explicit operator<< instantiations somewhere in the
source file, but that would lead to hard-to-figure-out linker error
whenever someone would add a different template type). There, where
possible, I changed from full <iostream> include to only the needed
<ostream> part.
For Span<T>, I just removed print_as_lines since it's not used by
anything. It could be moved into a .cc file using a similar approach
as above if needed.
Doing full blender build changes include counts this way:
- <iostream> 1986 -> 978
- <sstream> 2880 -> 925
It does not affect the total build time much though, mostly because
towards the end of it there's just several CPU cores finishing
compiling OpenVDB related source files.
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/111046
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.
Part 2 of the patch I wrote moving USD over to the new Attributes API
for Colors: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/105347
This patch adds support for more types of generic Mesh Attributes.
Attribute Types and Domains are converted to their USD counterparts
where possible. For example, float Attributes used for modifying
shader masks or int Attributes for grouping are now able to be
round-tripped. Due to the differences in the two systems some
conversions are necessary, but attempts were made to keep data
loss to a minimum.
If you export to USDA, you'll find the Attributes get prefixed with
a "primvars:" namespace; this is expected behavior and identifies
the exported Attributes as different from other USD Schema.
Not supported:
- Edge domain. There doesn't seem to be a proper conversion for
this in USD. One exception is for creasing and sharpness, but if
they are desired I can add them in a future patch.
Co-authored-by: kiki <charles@skeletalstudios.com>
Co-authored-by: Charles Wardlaw <cwardlaw@nvidia.com>
Co-authored-by: Hans Goudey <h.goudey@me.com>
Co-authored-by: Charles Wardlaw <kattkieru@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Michael Kowalski <makowalski@nvidia.com>
Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/109518
Using ClangBuildAnalyzer on the whole Blender build, it was pointing
out that BLI_math.h is the heaviest "header hub" (i.e. non tiny file
that is included a lot).
However, there's very little (actually zero) source files in Blender
that need "all the math" (base, colors, vectors, matrices,
quaternions, intersection, interpolation, statistics, solvers and
time). A common use case is source files needing just vectors, or
just vectors & matrices, or just colors etc. Actually, 181 files
were including the whole math thing without needing it at all.
This change removes BLI_math.h completely, and instead in all the
places that need it, includes BLI_math_vector.h or BLI_math_color.h
and so on.
Change from that:
- BLI_math_color.h was included 1399 times -> now 408 (took 114.0sec
to parse -> now 36.3sec)
- BLI_simd.h 1403 -> 418 (109.7sec -> 34.9sec).
Full rebuild of Blender (Apple M1, Xcode, RelWithDebInfo) is not
affected much (342sec -> 334sec). Most of benefit would be when
someone's changing BLI_simd.h or BLI_math_color.h or similar files,
that now there's 3x fewer files result in a recompile.
Pull Request #110944
Bug report #110948: a file with a polygon so large that a single line
is 140 kilobytes. The previous limit was 64kb, increase the read file
chunk limit to 256kb. Still not fully robust, would need a more
complex fix to support arbitrarily large line length limits.