Stupid mistake wrapping path validation code inside a BLI_assert, which means it was
only called in Debug builds...
Found by Sergey, thanks.
Should be backported to 2.78.
Those 'never null' ID pointers are really a PITA to handle... luckily we don't have much of those around!
Found by Sybren, thanks.
Should be backported to 2.78.
This is internal pointer helper for scene evaluation and tools, though exposed to bpy API,
it can give false 'dependency cycles' in bpy.data.user_map() results.
That's followup to rBe007552442634 really, both should be backported to 2.78
This is internal pointer helper for scene evaluation and tools, it's not exposed to bpy API anyway,
and can give false 'dependency cycles' in bpy.data.user_map() results.
Found by sybren in his Splode work.
Uses similar way of storing temp data as object copy paste, just
uses different read entrypoint which does not modify current bmain.
This gives ability to easily copy-paste poses from one blender to
another one.
Hopefully doesn't introduce user-measurable differences.
Request from Peer here in the studio.
Reviewers: mont29
Reviewed By: mont29
Subscribers: hjalti, fsiddi
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D2229
Regression from rB036c006cefe471. We can't use self here, self is bpy.app, not pydescriptor of python path getsetter...
So for now, do not try to replace getsetter by actual value in bpy.app's dict,
just return static var generated on first run.
Should be safe for 2.78.
I) Filename was not put in temp Main generated to save selected data only,
this was breaking readcode when trying to open partial file, leading to missing
filename in final loaded Main data.
II) Read code would confuse partial .blend files with Undo ones, when they had no screen in them
(which happens to 99.999% of partial .blend files I guess).
Reported by @sybren, thanks.
Should be safe enough for 2.78 release.
Vertex Buffer to store vertex attribute data.
Element List (AKA Index Buffer) to select which vertices to use.
Batch combines these into an object that can be built once then drawn
many times.
Porting over from the C++ version… Most of this C code is compiled but
unused. Some of it is not even compiled. Committing now in case I’m
lost at sea.
Put Gawain source code in a subfolder to make the boundary between the
library and the rest of Blender clear.
Changed Gawain’s license from Apache to Mozilla Public License. Has
more essence of copyleft — closer to GPL but not as restrictive.
Split immediate.c into several files so parts can be reused (adding
more files soon…)
The idea is to allow certain animation channels to be always visible in
animation editors. So, for example, one can pin Camera animation to the
editor so it is always possible to refine/tweak camera animation when
animating something else in the scene.
There is probably some more polishing required, and some current
limitations could be solved in the future but should be a good starting
point already.
Currently only works for object without recursing into deeper datablock
(so for example, it's not possible to pin object material animation).
Studio request by Colin Levy.
Now the factor works similar to other Blender areas to make the factor
more consistent for artists. The value 0% means equal to original
stroke, 100% equal to final stroke (50% means half way). Any value below
0% or greater than 100% create an overshoot of the stroke.
Root of the issue is that active render index became wrong. This is the actual
thing to be fixed, but as usual this is quite tricky to reproduce. Since such
bad situation might have happened more and fix isn't really difficult or
intruisive let's avoid crash for now.
Can be revisited once we figure out root of the issue.
Nice for 2.78 release.
Own fault in new ID management work, thought rebuild the DAG itself was
enough to actually update whole scene, but we actually need to tag datablocks
for update as well, when we change (or remove) one of their ID pointers...
OCD commit, but cleans the code a bit:
- the first `if 0` block was supposed to draw collision objects but is
vastly outdated as most of the SmokeCollisionSettings member variables
were removed a few years ago and collision objects are drawn like other
objects anyway. Also it was committed already commented out back in
2009.
- the second `if 0` block was doing pretty much the same thing as the
few lines above it.
This is really hack-fix actually, not sure why `get_pointcache_keys_for_time()` seems to assume
it will always find key for given part index at least for current frame, and whether this assumption
is wrong or whether bug happens elsewhere...
Anyway, this is to be wiped out in 2.8, so no point loosing too much time on it, for now merely
returning unchanged (i.e. zero'ed) ParticleKeys in case index2 is invalid. Won't hurt anyway,
even if this did not crash in release builds, would be returning giberish values.
When drawing with Grease Pencil "continous drawing" for a long time
(i.e. basically, drawing a very large number of strokes), it could be
possible to cause lower-specced machines to run out of RAM and start
swapping. This was because there was no limit on the number of undo
states that the GP undo code was storing; since the undo states grow
exponentially on each stroke (i.e. each stroke results in another undo
state which contains all the existing strokes AND the newest stroke), this
could cause issues when taken to the extreme.
See commit's comments for details, but this boils down to: do not try to use
purely runtime cache data as a 'real' ID pointer in readcode, it's likely
doomed to fail in some cases, and is bad practice in any case!
Thix fix implies dupliweight's object will be invalid until first scene update
(i.e. first particles evaluation).
Two new modal operators to create a grease pencil interpolate drawing
for one frame or a complete sequence between two frames. For drawing
the temporary strokes in the viewport, two drawing handlers have been
added to manage 3D and 2D stuff.
Video: https://youtu.be/qxYwO5sSg5Y
The operator shortcuts are Ctrl+E and Ctrl+Shift+E. During the modal
operator, the interpolation can be adjusted using the mouse (moving
left/right) or the wheel mouse.
immBegin requires us to know how many vertices will be drawn. Most times this is fine, but sometimes it can be tricky. Do we make the effort to count everything in one pass, then draw it in a second?
immBeginAtMost makes this simple. Example: I'll draw at most 100 vertices. Supply only 6 verts and it draws only 6.
Any unused space is reclaimed and given to the next immBegin.