The up_axis_update/forward_axis_update was the same logic between
the two, so factor that out.
Also use the same time reporting logic in PLY as in OBJ/USD/Alembic.
Motivation is to disambiguate on the naming level what the matrix
actually means. It is very easy to understand the meaning backwards,
especially since in Python the name goes the opposite way (it is
called `world_matrix` in the Python API).
It is important to disambiguate the naming without making developers
to look into the comment in the header file (which is also not super
clear either). Additionally, more clear naming facilitates the unit
verification (or, in this case, space validation) when reading an
expression.
This patch calls the matrix `object_to_world` which makes it clear
from the local code what is it exactly going on. This is only done
on DNA level, and a lot of local variables still follow the old
naming.
A DNA rename is setup in a way that there is no change on the file
level, so there should be no regressions at all.
The possibility is to add `_matrix` or `_mat` suffix to the name
to make it explicit that it is a matrix. Although, not sure if it
really helps the readability, or is it something redundant.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D16328
Using varargs had the disadvantages, replace with a macro which has
some advantages.
- Arguments are type checked.
- Less verbose.
- Unintended NULL arguments would silently terminate joining paths.
- Passing in a NULL argument warns with GCC.
Ensure the "null" node graph, which is the root node of the export
graph, always exists.
The crash occured when "Use Settings For" was set to Render, "Visible
Objects Only" was ticked, and a single parent object is in the scene but
disabled for render.
Because the only object attached to the root of the project was disabled
for export, there was no "null" root node added to the export graph.
This change will always add an empty "null" node with no children to the
graph at the start. Other objects will get added to its children as
required.
Reviewed By: sybren
Maniphest Tasks: T85729
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15182
The documentation for `HierarchyIterator::weak_export` mentions a feature
that was removed at some point. Another example is used to illustrate its
functionality.
No functional changes.
A new experimentatl STL importer, written in C++. Roughly 7-9x faster than the
Python based one.
Reviewed By: Aras Pranckevicius, Hans Goudey.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14941
New OBJ exporter is missing "Path Mode" setting for exporting .mtl
files. The options that used to be available were: Auto, Absolute,
Relative, Match, Strip Path, Copy. All of them are important. The new
behavior (without any UI option to control it) curiously does not match
any of the previous setting. New behavior is like "Relative, but to the
source blender file, and not the destination export file".
Most of the previous logic was only present in Python based code
(bpy_extras.io_utils.path_reference and friends). The bulk of this
commit is porting that to C++.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14906
Add support for volume (OpenVDB) USD export:
- Allows to export both static and animated volumes.
- Supports volumes that have OpenVDB data from files or are generated in
Blender with 'Mesh to Volume' modifier.
- For volumes that have generated data in Blender it also exports
corresponding .vdb files. Those files are saved in a new folder named
"volumes".
- Slightly changes the USD export UI panel. "Relative Texture Paths"
becomes "Relative Paths" (and has separate UI box) as the
functionality will now apply to both textures and volumes. Disabling
of this option due to "Materials" checkbox being turned off has been
removed.
Reviewed By: sybren, makowalski
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14193
Manifest Task: T95407
Continued improvements to the new C++ based OBJ importer.
Performance: about 2x faster.
- Rungholt.obj (several meshes, 263MB file): Windows 12.7s -> 5.9s, Mac 7.7s -> 3.1s.
- Blender 3.0 splash (24k meshes, 2.4GB file): Windows 97.3s -> 53.6s, Mac 137.3s -> 80.0s.
- "Windows" is VS2022, AMD Ryzen 5950X (32 threads), "Mac" is Xcode/clang 13, M1Max (10 threads).
- Slightly reduced memory usage during import as well.
The performance gains are a combination of several things:
- Replacing `std::stof` / `std::stoi` with C++17 `from_chars`.
- Stop reading input file char-by-char using `std::getline`, and instead read in 64kb chunks, and parse from there (taking care of possibly handling lines split mid-way due to chunk boundaries).
- Removing abstractions for splitting a line by some char,
- Avoid tiny memory allocations: instead of storing a vector of polygon corners in each face, store all the corners in one big array, and per-face only store indices "where do corners start, and how many". Likewise, don't store full string names of material/group names for each face; only store indices into overall material/group names arrays.
- Stop always doing mesh validation, which is slow. Do it just like the Alembic importer does: only do validation if found some invalid faces during import, or if requested by the user via an import setting checkbox (which defaults to off).
- Stop doing "collection sync" for each object being added; instead do the collection sync right after creating all the objects.
Cleanup / Robustness:
This reworking of parser (see "removing abstractions" point above) means that all the functions that were in `parser_string_utils` file are gone, and replaced with different set of functions. However they are not OBJ specific, so as pointed out during review of the previous differential, they are now in `source/blender/io/common` library.
Added gtest coverage for said functions as well; something that was only indirectly covered by obj tests previously.
Rework of some bits of parsing made the parser actually better able to deal with invalid syntax. E.g. previously, if a face corner were a `/123` string, it would have incorrectly treated that as a vertex index (since it would get "hey that's one number" after splitting a string by a slash), instead of properly marking it as invalid syntax.
Added gtest coverage for .mtl parsing; something that was not covered by any tests at all previously.
Reviewed By: Howard Trickey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D14586
Use a shorter/simpler license convention, stops the header taking so
much space.
Follow the SPDX license specification: https://spdx.org/licenses
- C/C++/objc/objc++
- Python
- Shell Scripts
- CMake, GNUmakefile
While most of the source tree has been included
- `./extern/` was left out.
- `./intern/cycles` & `./intern/atomic` are also excluded because they
use different header conventions.
doc/license/SPDX-license-identifiers.txt has been added to list SPDX all
used identifiers.
See P2788 for the script that automated these edits.
Reviewed By: brecht, mont29, sergey
Ref D14069
`ABCPointsWriter::is_supported` already checked for valid particle
system types (liquid, spray, foam, bubbles, ...).
`AbstractHierarchyIterator::make_writers_particle_systems` did not
create a writer for these though, so now bring these in line and also
create writers for these.
This is an initial implementation of a USD importer.
This work is comprised of Tangent Animation's open source USD importer,
combined with features @makowalski had implemented.
The design is very similar to the approach taken in the Alembic
importer. The core functionality resides in a collection of "reader"
classes, each of which is responsible for converting an instance of a
USD prim to the corresponding Blender Object representation.
The flow of control for the conversion can be followed in the
`import_startjob()` and `import_endjob()` functions in `usd_capi.cc`.
The `USDStageReader` class is responsible for traversing the USD stage
and instantiating the appropriate readers.
Reviewed By: sybren, HooglyBoogly
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10700
This removes a lot of unnecessary code that is generated by
the compiler automatically.
In very few cases, a defaulted destructor in a .cc file is
still necessary, because of forward declarations in the header.
I removed some defaulted virtual destructors, because they are not
necessary, when the parent class has a virtual destructor already.
Defaulted constructors are only necessary when there is another
constructor, but the class should still be default constructible.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D10911
Add a test that checks invisible objects are iterated over by the
`IO::AbstractHierarchyIterator` class, when a suitable depsgraph is given.
No functional changes.
Add a new depsgraph builder class that includes invisible objects and
use that in the Alembic exporter.
Alembic supports three options for visibility, "visible", "inherited",
and "hidden". This means that parents can be hidden and still have
visible children (contrary to USD, where invisibility is used to prune
an entire scene graph subtree). Because of this, the visibility is
stored on the transform node, as that represents the Object in Blender
and thus keeps the Alembic file as close to Blender's own structure as
possible.
Reviewed By: Sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8595
And make them part of the blender_test runner. The one exception is blenlib
performance tests, which we don't want to run by default. They remain in their
own executable.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8498
This replaces header include guards with `#pragma once`.
A couple of include guards are not removed yet (e.g. `__RNA_TYPES_H__`),
because they are used in other places.
This patch has been generated by P1561 followed by `make format`.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8466
The root cause was that `BKE_object_moves_in_time()` incorrectly returns
`false` when an object is moved by the physics system.
This also fixes the same issue in the USD exporter.
The function is called for all writers, not just 'object' writers.
Furthermore, it's called by the function `release_writers()`, so now the
name is consistent with that as well.
No functional changes.
The unit tests for `bf_io_common` didn't actually link against
`bf_io_common`, so when both USD and Alembic were disabled, nothing
would link against that library and building the tests would fail.
This commit is a followup of {D7649}, and ports the USD tests to the new
testing approach. It moves test code from `tests/gtests/usd` into
`source/blender/io/common` and `source/blender/io/usd`, and adjusts the
use of namespaces to be consistent with the other tests.
I decided to put one test into `io/usd/tests`, instead of
`io/usd/intern`. The reason is that this test does not correspond with a
single file in that directory; instead, it tests Blender's integration
with the USD library itself.
There are two new CLI arguments for the Big Test Runner:
- `--test-assets-dir`, which points to the `lib/tests` directory in the
SVN repository. This allows unit tests to find test assets.
- `--test-release-dir`, which points to `bin/{BLENDER_VERSION}` in the
build directory. At the moment this is only used by the USD test.
The CLI arguments are automatically passed to the Big Test Runner when
using `ctest`. When manually running the tests, the arguments are only
required when there is a test run that needs them.
For more info about splitting some code into 'common', see
rB084c5d6c7e2cf8.
No functional changes to the tests themselves, only to the way they are
built & run.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8314
Reviewed by: brecht, mont29