Files
test2/source/blender/imbuf
Sergey Sharybin 406cfd214a Refactor ImBuf buffer access
The goal is to make it more explicit and centralized operation to
assign and steal buffer data, with proper ownership tracking.

The buffers and ownership flags are wrapped into their dedicated
structures now.

There should be no functional changes currently, it is a preparation
for allowing implicit sharing of the ImBuf buffers. Additionally, in
the future it is possible to more buffer-specific information (such
as color space) next to the buffer data itself. It is also possible
to clean up the allocation flags (IB_rect, ...) to give them more
clear naming and not have stored in the ImBuf->flags as they are only
needed for allocation.

The most dangerous part of this change is the change of byte buffer
data from `int*` to `uint8_t*`. In a lot of cases the byte buffer was
cast to `uchar*`, so those casts are now gone. But some code is
operating on `int*` so now there are casts in there. In practice this
should be fine, since we only support 64bit platforms, so allocations
are aligned. The real things to watch out for here is the fact that
allocation and offsetting from the byte buffer now need an explicit 4
channel multiplier.

Once everything is C++ it will be possible to simplify public
functions even further.

Pull Request: https://projects.blender.org/blender/blender/pulls/107609
2023-05-18 10:19:01 +02:00
..
2023-05-18 10:19:01 +02:00
2023-05-02 11:32:27 +02:00
2023-05-18 10:19:01 +02:00
2023-05-18 10:19:01 +02:00

The following 4 steps to adding a new image format to blender, its
probably easiest to look at the png code for a clean clear example,
animation formats are a bit more complicated but very similar:

Step 1:
create a new file named after the format for example lets say we were
creating an openexr read/writer  use openexr.c
It should contain functions to match the following prototypes:

struct ImBuf *imb_loadopenexr(unsigned char *mem,int size,int flags);
/* Use one of the following depending on what's easier for your file format */
short imb_saveopenexr(struct ImBuf *ibuf, FILE myfile, int flags);
short imb_saveopenexr(struct ImBuf *ibuf, char *myfile, int flags);

/* Used to test if its the correct format
int IMB_is_openexr(void *buf);

Step 2:
Add your hooks to read and write the image format these go in
	writeimage.c and readimage.c  just look at how the others are done

Step 3:
Add in IS_openexr to blender/source/blender/imbuf/IMB_imbuf_types.h
Add in R_openexr to source/blender/makesdna/DNA_scene_types.h

Step 4:
Add your hooks to the gui.
source/blender/src/buttons_scene.c
source/blender/src/toets.c
source/blender/src/writeimage.c

Step 5:
edit the following files:
blender/source/blender/imbuf/intern/util.c
blender/source/blender/src/filesel.c
blender/source/blender/src/screendump.c
and add your extension so that your format gets recognized in the thumbnails.

Step 6:
Alter the build process:
For cmake you need to edit blender/source/blender/imbuf/CMakeLists.txt
and add in your additional files to source_files.
If you have any external library info you will also need to add that
to the various build processes.

Step 7:
Its also good to add your image format to:
makepicstring in blender/source/blender/blenkernel/intern/image.c