Regression introduced by {c766d9b9dc56}. When converting the vertex
buffer to a texture buffer the fetch mode wasn't checked and the short
was bitwise interpreted as a float. This change checks the fetch_mode
and select the correct texture buffer.
This could also be added to other places when needed. At this time it is
only added here to support vertex colors when used with hair particles.
This change makes it possible for platforms to only support high quality
normal rendering. This is part of {T82856} where current AMD drivers
running on the polaris architecture does not support the low quality
setting due to a driver bug.
In a next commit the work around will be enabled.
Some GPU platforms don't support having more than one underscore in
sequence in an attribute name. This change will remove the underscore
as a possible character when encoding to save names.
Fix T83415: 3D View is red when using stereo
The red view was caused by SRGB not being enabled for an SRGB texture attached to the framebuffer.
Currently, when configuring a framebuffer, the first texture attachment needs to be an SRGB format in order for the framebuffer to be binded with SRGB enabled.
Thus, simply changing the SRGB texture attachment as the first texture attachment removes the red color in the view.
Reviewed By: #eevee_viewport, jbakker
Maniphest Tasks: T83415
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9845
Modernize loops by using the `for(type variable : container)` syntax.
Some loops were trivial to fix, whereas others required more attention
to avoid semantic changes. I couldn't address all old-style loops, so
this commit doesn't enable the `modernize-loop-convert` rule.
Although Clang-Tidy's auto-fixer prefers to use `auto` for the loop
variable declaration, I made as many declarations as possible explicit.
To me this increases local readability, as you don't need to fully
understand the container in order to understand the loop variable type.
No functional changes.
Replace `typedef` with `using` in C++ code.
In the case of `typedef struct SomeName { ... } SomeName;` I removed the
`typedef` altogether, as this is unnecessary in C++. Such cases have been
rewritten to `struct SomeName { ... };`
No functional changes.
This patch adds support for AOVs in EEVEE. AOV Outputs can be defined in the
render pass tab and used in shader materials. Both Object and World based
shaders are supported. The AOV can be previewed in the viewport using the
renderpass selector in the shading popover.
AOV names that conflict with other AOVs are automatically corrected. AOV
conflicts with render passes get a warning icon. The reason behind this is that
changing render engines/passes can change the conflict, but you might not notice
it. Changing this automatically would also make the materials incorrect, so best
to leave this to the user.
**Implementation**
The patch adds a copies the AOV structures of Cycles into Blender. The goal is
that the Cycles will use Blenders AOV defintions. In the Blender kernel
(`layer.c`) the logic of these structures are implemented.
The GLSL shader of any GPUMaterial can hold multiple outputs (the main output
and the AOV outputs) based on the renderPassUBO the right output is selected.
This selection uses an hash that encodes the AOV structure. The full AOV needed
to be encoded when actually drawing the material pass as the AOV type changes
the behavior of the AOV. This isn't known yet when the GLSL is compiled.
**Future Developments**
* The AOV definitions in the render layer panel isn't shared with Cycles.
Cycles should be migrated to use the same viewlayer aovs. During a previous
attempt this failed as the AOV validation in cycles and in Blender have
implementation differences what made it crash when an aov name was invalid.
This could be fixed by extending the external render engine API.
* Add support to Cycles to render AOVs in the 3d viewport.
* Use a drop down list for selecting AOVs in the AOV Output node.
* Give user feedback when multiple AOV output nodes with the same AOV name
exists in the same shader.
* Fix viewing single channel images in the image editor [T83314]
* Reduce viewport render time by only render needed draw passes. [T83316]
Reviewed By: Brecht van Lommel, Clément Foucault
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D7010
This patch allows the user to type a property name into the
Attribute node, which will then output the value of the property
for each individual object, allowing to e.g. customize shaders
by object without duplicating the shader.
In order to make supporting this easier for Eevee, it is necessary
to explicitly choose whether the attribute is varying or uniform
via a dropdown option of the Attribute node. The dropdown also
allows choosing whether instancing should be taken into account.
The Cycles design treats all attributes as one common namespace,
so the Blender interface converts the enum to a name prefix that
can't be entered using keyboard.
In Eevee, the attributes are provided to the shader via a UBO indexed
with resource_id, similar to the existing Object Info data. Unlike it,
however, it is necessary to maintain a separate buffer for every
requested combination of attributes.
This is done using a hash table with the attribute set as the key,
as it is expected that technically different but similar materials
may use the same set of attributes. In addition, in order to minimize
wasted memory, a sparse UBO pool is implemented, so that chunks that
don't contain any data don't have to be allocated.
The back-end Cycles code is already refactored and committed by Brecht.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2057
Add a new Alpha socket to the Attribute node that outputs the
fourth component of the attribute. Currently the only such
attribute is vertex color, but there may be more in the future.
If the attribute has no alpha channel, the expected value is 1.
The Cycles code is already refactored and committed by Brecht.
Ref D2057
The underlying type of the enum cannot be fixed here due to its usage
in C code.
All the values possible in the width of the underlying type are not
valid for an enum.
Only 0 to (2*max - 1) if all enumerators are unsigned.
So the macro asks for the biggest value among the //listed// ones.
If any enumerator C is set to say `A|B`, then C would be the maximum.
(2*max-1) is used as the mask.
The warnings (for each enum modified in this commit):
GPU_vertex_buffer.h:43:1: runtime error: load of value 4294967291
which is not a valid value for type 'GPUVertBufStatus'
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/commit/1c2c9867
Ref T81340
Reviewed By: fclem
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9067
This directly adress the issues caused by rB536c2e0ec916.
Since the state tracking is done at a lower level, using the bgl
functions needs to be safegarded by the state manager.
The current workaround is to bypass `apply_state` when inside a
callback that used a `bgl` function.
Related to T80730.
This fix T81003.
Also this fix the default blend equation for callbacks.
Fixes T80169 T81289.
This path makes use of more framebuffers when using the gpu workarounds.
Increase the MAX FBO attachments per texture. Maybe we could use a growing
vector in the future.
This makes wide line supported on MacOS and other implementation that
does not support wide line by default.
This workaround works for all Line types but only if using one of the 5
default shaders.
The workaround is completely isolated and invisible to the outside. It has
no side effect.
Note: This does not affect the GPUBatch drawing.
This removes the limitation of the sculpt overlays not being visible
with modifiers active.
Reviewed By: fclem
Maniphest Tasks: T68900
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8673