Rename:
- `BKE_animsys_store_rna_setting` → `BKE_animsys_rna_path_resolve`
- `BKE_animsys_read_rna_setting` → `BKE_animsys_read_from_rna_path`
- `BKE_animsys_write_rna_setting` → `BKE_animsys_write_to_rna_path`
The concept of "RNA setting" is unclear; the new names reflect better
what the functions actually do.
No functional changes.
Corrects incorrect usage of contraction for 'it is', when possessive 'its' was required.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9250
Reviewed by Campbell Barton
Note that possibility to pass the new ID pointer as parameter was kept,
as this is needed for some rather specific cases (like in depsgraph/COW,
when copying into already allocated memory).
Part of T71219.
This reverts {rB1693a5efe91999b60b3dc0bdff727473b3bd00bb}
and implements an alternative solution.
The old patch had the problem that the depsgraph would always
evaluate at the current frame of the original scene (even when
`DEG_evaluate_on_framechange` was used). Now it is possible
to evaluate the depsgraph at a specific frame without having to
change the original scene.
Reviewers: sergey, sybren
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8616
This mainly removes the bmain argument, which can be
retrieved from the graph itself.
Also, I removed some outdated/unnecessary comments.
Reviewers: sergey, sybren
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8614
Solves possible pointer-based comparison fiasco.
Another nice outcome of this is that topology cache will now be
preserved throughout the undo system. For example, undo of object
transform will not require topology cache to be re-created.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8493
The root of the issue comes to the fact that sub-data pointers were
used to match strips before/after copy-on-write. The undo system might
re-use sub-data pointers after re-allocating them, making it so that,
for example, pointer used by sound strip is later re-used by video
strip.
This fix takes an advantage of recently introduced per-sequence UUID
and uses it to match sequences before/after copy-on-write.
Will trigger code paths which makes sure UUIDs are generated and
are unique.
Enabled with --debug-depsgraph-uuid (which is also implied by
--debug-depsgraph).
A simulation data block has an embedded node tree, which requires
special handling in a couple of places. Some of those places were
missing beforehand.
This also adds a relation to make sure that the simulation is evaluated
after animations on the embedded node tree are evaluated.
This updates the usage of integer types in code I wrote according to our new style guides.
Major changes:
* Use signed instead of unsigned integers in many places.
* C++ containers in blenlib use `int64_t` for size and indices now (instead of `uint`).
* Hash values for C++ containers are 64 bit wide now (instead of 32 bit).
I do hope that I broke no builds, but it is quite likely that some compiler reports
slightly different errors. Please let me know when there are any errors. If the fix
is small, feel free to commit it yourself.
I compiled successfully on linux with gcc and on windows.
Every Particle Simulation node has a name (or a path when it is in a node group).
This name has to be used in the Simulation modifier on a point cloud to see
the particles.
Caching has been disabled for now, because it was holding back development
a bit. To reset the simulation, go back to frame 1.
Currently, there is no way to influence the simulation. There are just some
randomly moving points. Changing that is the next step.
Note that this is partially WIP code, we only take care of shapekeys
here for now.
Also, move this tagging for liboverride refresh into same chack as the
one for tagging editors, sounds more logical that way.
This makes any operation (including mere bone selection) several times
faster on some complex production character, since we typically now only
need to diff a single ID, instead of tens of them.
We decided to use our own map data structure in general for better
readability and performance.
Reviewers: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7987
Now all overrides are handled that way. Performances of the process look
decent enough, even with production characters...
If performance issues still arise, we'll investigate other solutions.
This should also make T73154 obsolete now.
We decided that `blender::Vector` should be the default choice for
a vector data structure in Blender.
Reviewers: sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7981
The current particle state is stored in a `CustomData` instance and
the cache is stored in `PointCache`.
The current state exists on the copy-on-write copies of the simulation,
while the cache only exists in the original data block.
This patch implements a temporary trivial particle simulation that does not
use the node system yet. It is used for testing and will be replaced soon.
`PointCache` still has some limitations that need to be overcome using
separate refactorings. For example, we need to be able to store the number
of particles in the point cache. Also we need to change which attributes
are stored for a particle system more dynamically than is currently possible afaik.
Reviewers: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7836
Surrounding includes with an 'extern "C"' block is not necessary anymore.
Also that made it harder to add any C++ code to some headers, or include headers
that have "optional" C++ code like `MEM_guardedalloc.h`.
I tested compilation on linux and windows (and got help from @LazyDodo).
If this still breaks compilation due to some linker error, the header containing
the symbol in question is probably missing an 'extern "C"' block.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7653
This patch enables TBB as the default task scheduler. TBB stands for Threading Building Blocks and is developed by Intel. The library contains several threading patters. This patch maps blenders BLI_task_* function to their counterpart. After this patch we can add more patterns. A promising one is TBB:graph that can be used for depsgraph, draw manager and compositor.
Performance changes depends on the actual hardware. It was tested on different hardwares from laptops to workstations and we didn't detected any downgrade of the performance.
* Linux Xeon E5-2699 v4 got FPS boost from 12 to 17 using Spring's 04_010_A.anim.blend.
* AMD Ryzen Threadripper 2990WX 32-Core Animation playback goes from 9.5-10.5 FPS to 13.0-14.0 FPS on Agent 327 , 10_03_B.anim.blend.
Reviewed By: brecht, sergey
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7475
Tasks: move priority from task to task pool {rBf7c18df4f599fe39ffc914e645e504fcdbee8636}
Tasks: split task.c into task_pool.cc and task_iterator.c {rB4ada1d267749931ca934a74b14a82479bcaa92e0}
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7385