Conflicts resolved:
source/blenderplayer/bad_level_call_stubs/SConscript
Partly reverted changes to intern/cycles/blender/addon/ui.py in revision 52899
to make it easier to merge trunk changes.
and RNA for it independent of the build flag for enabling Freestyle. Suggested
by Sergey Sharybin through a code review of the branch.
* Many #ifdef WITH_FREESTYLE blocks were removed to always have Freestyle-specific
DNA file specification and RNA for it built in Blender. This will allow Freestyle
setting survive even when a non-Freestyle build is used for loading and saving
files. It is noted that operations are still conditionally built through #ifdef
WITH_FREESTYLE blocks.
* To this end, new blenkernel files BKE_freestyle.h and intern/freestyle.c have
been added. All API functions in FRS_freestyle_config.h as well as some of those
in FRS_freestyle.h were moved to the new files. Now the relocated API functions
have BKE_ prefix instead of FRS_.
This simply adds a third "translation type" (in addition to iface and tip), "new data", with relevant user settings flag and helper funcs/macros (and py api).
Currently implemented name translation when adding new objects, as well as modifiers and constraints, will add the others (cd layers, scenes, perhaps nodes [though I think they do not need this], etc.) later.
Resolved conflicts:
release/datafiles/startup.blend
source/blender/editors/space_nla/nla_buttons.c
Also updated source/blender/blenkernel/intern/linestyle.c as a follow-up of
recent changes for the use of bool.
besides performance in some cases.
* DAG_scene_sort is now removed and replaced by DAG_relations_tag_update in
most cases. This will clear the dependency graph, and only rebuild it right
before it's needed again when the scene is re-evaluated.
This is done because DAG_scene_sort is slow when called many times from
python operators. Further the scene argument is not needed because most
operations can potentially affect more than the current scene.
* DAG_scene_relations_update will now rebuild the dependency graph if it's not
there yet, and DAG_scene_relations_rebuild will force a rebuild for the rare
cases that need it.
* Remove various places where ob->recalc was set manually. This should go
through DAG_id_tag_update() in nearly all cases instead since this is now
a fast operation. Also removed DAG_ids_flush_update that goes along with
such manual tagging of ob->recalc.
Since rigid bodies need their world to be be updated correctly we now
pass it alongside the parent scene in scene_update_tagged_recursive().
Add BKE_object_handle_update_ex() as well as other object functions
that take a RigidBodyWorld for this.
Ideally this shouldn't be needed but we'd have to restructure scene
handling for that. It's not a small taks however and definitely not
something that can be done before release.
Thanks to Campbell for review.
This was caused by multiple instantiations of the same basic problem. The
rigidbody handling code often assumed that "scene" pointers referred to the
scene where an object participating in the sim resided (and where the rigidbody
world for that sim lived). However, when dealing with background sets, "scene"
often only refers to the active scene, and not the set that the object actually
came from. Hence, the rigidbody code would often (wrongly) conclude that there
was nothing to do.
For example, we may have the following backgound set/scene chaining scenario:
"active" <-- ... <-- set i (rigidbody objects live here) <-- ... <-- set n
The fix here is a multi-part fix:
1) Moved sim-world calculation from BKE_scene_update_newframe() to
scene_update_tagged_recursive()
+ This is currently the only way that rigidbody sims in background sets will
get calculated, as part of the recursion
- These checks will get run on each update. <--- FIXME!!!
2) Tweaked depsgraph code so that when checking if there are any time-dependent
features on objects to tag for updating, the checking is done relative to the
scene that the object actually resides in (and not the active scene). Otherwise,
even if we recalculate the sim, the affected objects won't get tagged for
updating. This tagging is needed to actually flush the transforms out of the
RigidBodyObject structs (written by the sim/cache) and into the Object
transforms (obmat's)
3) Removed the requirement for rigidbody world to actually exist before we can
flush rigidbody transforms. In many cases, it should be sufficient to assume
that because the object with rigidbody data attached has been tagged for
updates, it should have updates to perform. Of course, we still check on this
data if we've got it, but that's only if the sim is in the active scene.
- TODO: if we have further problems, we should investigate passing the
"actual" scene down alongside the "active" scene for BKE_object_handle_update().
This will preserve constraint <-> rigid body realationships so
constraint setups aren't broken after duplication.
Based on a patch by Brandon Hechinger (jaggz), thanks.
Issue was caused by couple of circumstances:
- Normal Map node requires tesselated faces to compute tangent space
- All temporary meshes needed for Cycles export were adding to G.main
- Undo pushes would temporary set meshes tessfaces to NULL
- Moving node will cause undo push and tree re-evaluate fr preview
All this leads to threading conflict between preview render and undo
system.
Solved it in way that all temporary meshes are adding to that exact
Main which was passed to Cycles via BlendData. This required couple
of mechanic changes like adding extra parameter to *_add() functions
and adding some *_ex() functions to make it possible RNA adds objects
to Main passed to new() RNA function.
This was tricky to pass Main to RNA function and IMO that's not so
nice to pass main to function, so ended up with such decision:
- Object.to_mesh() will add temp mesh to G.main
- Added Main.meshes.new_from_object() which does the same as to_mesh,
but adds temporary mesh to specified Main.
So now all temporary meshes needed for preview render would be added
to preview_main which does not conflict with undo pushes.
Viewport render shall not be an issue because object sync happens from
main thread in this case.
It could be some issues with final render, but that's not so much
likely to happen, so shall be fine.
Thanks to Brecht for review!
Change Scene.frame_set so that it ensures subframe in range [0,1[ as Blender
expects, otherwise some things like physics point cache lookups don't get
evaluated properly.
Constraints connect two rigid bodies.
Depending on which constraint is used different degrees of freedom
are limited, e.g. a hinge constraint only allows the objects to rotate
around a common axis.
Constraints are implemented as individual objects and bahave similar to
rigid bodies in terms of adding/removing/validating.
The position and orientation of the constraint object is the pivot point
of the constraint.
Constraints have their own group in the rigid body world.
To make connecting rigid bodies easier, there is a "Connect" operator that
creates an empty objects with a rigid body constraint connecting the selected
objects to active.
Currently the following constraints are implemented:
* Fixed
* Point
* Hinge
* Slider
* Piston
* Generic
Note: constraint limits aren't animatable yet).
Add operators to add/remove rigid body world and objects.
Add UI scripts.
The rigid body simulation works on scene level and overrides the
position/orientation of rigid bodies when active.
It does not deform meshes or generate data so there is no modifier.
Usage:
* Add rigid body world in the scene tab
* Create a group
* Add objects to the group
* Assign group to the rigid body world
* Play animation
For convenience the rigid body tools operators in the tools panel of the 3d view
will add a world, group and add objects to the group automatically so you only have
to press one button to add/remove rigid bodies to the simulation.
Part of GSoC 2010 and 2012.
Authors: Joshua Leung (aligorith), Sergej Reich (sergof)
This is just the basic structure, the simulation isn't hooked up yet.
Scenes get a pointer to a rigid body world that holds rigid body objects.
Objects get a pointer to a rigdid body object.
Both rigid body world and objects aren't used directly in the simulation
and only hold information to create the actual physics objects.
Physics objects are created when rigid body objects are validated.
In order to keep blender and bullet objects in sync care has to be taken
to either call appropriate set functions or flag objects for validation.
Part of GSoC 2010 and 2012.
Authors: Joshua Leung (aligorith), Sergej Reich (sergof)
It was caused by image threading safe commit and it was noticeable
only on really multi-core CPU (like dual-socket Xeon stations), was
not visible on core i7 machine.
The reason of slowdown was spinlock around image buffer referencing,
which lead to lots of cores waiting for single core and using image
buffer after it was referenced was not so much longer than doing
reference itself.
The most clear solution here seemed to be introducing Image Pool
which will contain list of loaded and referenced image buffers, so
all threads could skip lock if the pool is used for reading only.
Lock only needed in cases when buffer for requested image user is
missing in the pool. This lock will happen only once per image so
overall amount of locks is much less that it was before.
To operate with pool:
- BKE_image_pool_new() creates new pool
- BKE_image_pool_free() destroys pool and dereferences all image
buffers which were loaded to it
- BKE_image_pool_acquire_ibuf() returns image buffer for given
image and user. Pool could be NULL and in this case fallback to
BKE_image_acquire_ibuf will happen.
This helps to avoid lots to if(poll) checks in image sampling
code.
- BKE_image_pool_release_ibuf releases image buffer. In fact, it
will only do something if pool is NULL, in all other case it'll
equal to DoNothing operation.
* Add a detail_size field to the Sculpt struct, two new sculpt flags,
and a Mesh flag for dynamic-topology mode; that's it for file-level
changes needed by dynamic topology
* Add RNA for the new DNA field and flags
* Add a new icon for dynamic-topology created by Julio Iglesias. TODO:
update the icon for the new SVG icon format
* Add a SculptSession function for converting from BMesh to Mesh,
handles reordering mesh elements and setting face shading
- Transform now is relative to the bone root.
For backwards compatibility this transform was set to the tip for parenting...
Now the new parenting option uses the root, the old one still the tip.
I've noted in the code to check on a version patch, to make it consistent.
New Bone option: "Relative Parenting".
This makes Child-Objects of Bones transform similar to how deformations
of bones are calculated. Allows to move bones in editmode to set pivot.
The option is in Bone Panel, with clear label.
It is ON now by default when you add new bones
Requested by Kjartan, our famous robot designer :) For "hard body rigs" it's
very useful.
With 2 windows, 2 scenes, linked objects:
- enter editmode in 1 window.
- the other window allowed to enter editmode too.
- and crash happened on exit editmode.
Since editmode is in Context (scene->obedit) a bad conflict arises.
New function BKE_object_is_in_editmode() returns this info outside of
context. Note I didn't use BMEdit_FromObject() because of the assert().
NOTE: contextual storage of editmode could need rework... five places:
- ob->mode / ob->restore_mode
- scene->object
- CTX_data_edit_object()
- BKE_object_is_in_editmode()
- view3d mode handling menu
now blenlib/BLI doesn't depend on any blenkern/BKE functions,
there are still some bad level includes but these are only to access G.background and the blender version define.