Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
eedcf1876a Functions: introduce multi-function namespace
This moves all multi-function related code in the `functions` module
into a new `multi_function` namespace. This is similar to how there
is a `lazy_function` namespace.

The main benefit of this is that many types names that were prefixed
with `MF` (for "multi function") can be simplified.

There is also a common shorthand for the `multi_function` namespace: `mf`.
This is also similar to lazy-functions where the shortened namespace
is called `lf`.
2023-01-07 17:32:28 +01:00
4130f1e674 Geometry Nodes: new evaluation system
This refactors the geometry nodes evaluation system. No changes for the
user are expected. At a high level the goals are:
* Support using geometry nodes outside of the geometry nodes modifier.
* Support using the evaluator infrastructure for other purposes like field evaluation.
* Support more nodes, especially when many of them are disabled behind switch nodes.
* Support doing preprocessing on node groups.

For more details see T98492.

There are fairly detailed comments in the code, but here is a high level overview
for how it works now:
* There is a new "lazy-function" system. It is similar in spirit to the multi-function
  system but with different goals. Instead of optimizing throughput for highly
  parallelizable work, this system is designed to compute only the data that is actually
  necessary. What data is necessary can be determined dynamically during evaluation.
  Many lazy-functions can be composed in a graph to form a new lazy-function, which can
  again be used in a graph etc.
* Each geometry node group is converted into a lazy-function graph prior to evaluation.
  To evaluate geometry nodes, one then just has to evaluate that graph. Node groups are
  no longer inlined into their parents.

Next steps for the evaluation system is to reduce the use of threads in some situations
to avoid overhead. Many small node groups don't benefit from multi-threading at all.
This is much easier to do now because not everything has to be inlined in one huge
node tree anymore.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15914
2022-09-13 08:44:32 +02:00
25e307d725 Nodes: move NodeTreeRef functionality into node runtime data
The purpose of `NodeTreeRef` was to speed up various queries on a read-only
`bNodeTree`. Not that we have runtime data in nodes and sockets, we can also
store the result of some queries there. This has some benefits:
* No need for a read-only separate node tree data structure which increased
  complexity.
* Makes it easier to reuse cached queries in more parts of Blender that can
  benefit from it.

A downside is that we loose some type safety that we got by having different
types for input and output sockets, as well as internal and non-internal links.

This patch also refactors `DerivedNodeTree` so that it does not use
`NodeTreeRef` anymore, but uses `bNodeTree` directly instead.

To provide a convenient API (that is also close to what `NodeTreeRef` has), a
new approach is implemented: `bNodeTree`, `bNode`, `bNodeSocket` and `bNodeLink`
now have C++ methods declared in `DNA_node_types.h` which are implemented in
`BKE_node_runtime.hh`. To make this work, `makesdna` now skips c++ sections when
parsing dna header files.

No user visible changes are expected.

Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D15491
2022-08-31 12:16:13 +02:00
c434782e3a File headers: SPDX License migration
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
2022-02-11 09:14:36 +11:00
eb0d216dc1 Geometry Nodes: decouple multi-function lifetimes from modifier
Previously, some multi-functions were allocated in a resource scope.
This was fine as long as the multi-functions were only needed during
the current evaluation of the node tree. However, now cases arise
that require the multi-functions to be alive after the modifier is finished.
For example, we want to evaluate fields created with geometry nodes
outside of geometry nodes.

To make this work, `std::shared_ptr` has to be used in a few more places.
Realistically, this shouldn't have a noticable impact on performance.
If this does become a bottleneck in the future, we can think about ways
to make this work without using `shared_ptr` for multi-functions that
are only used once.
2021-10-18 11:46:21 +02:00
2b66b372bc Cleanup: use doxygen sections 2021-10-05 11:10:25 +11:00
dee0b56b92 Cleanup: simplify resource scope methods
Previously, a debug name had to be passed to all methods
that added a resource to the `ResourceScope`. The idea was
that this would make it easier to find certain bugs. In reality
I never found this to be useful, and it was mostly annoying.
The thing is, something that is in a resource scope never leaks
(unless the resource scope is not destructed of course).

Removing the name parameter makes the structure easier to use.
2021-09-14 16:08:09 +02:00
0081200812 Functions: remove multi-function network
The multi-function network system was able to compose multiple
multi-functions into a new one and to evaluate that efficiently.
This functionality was heavily used by the particle nodes prototype
a year ago. However, since then we only used multi-functions
without the need to compose them in geometry nodes.

The upcoming "fields" in geometry nodes will need a way to
compose multi-functions again. Unfortunately, the code removed
in this commit was not ideal for this different kind of function
composition. I've been working on an alternative that will be added
separately when it becomes needed.

I've had to update all the function nodes, because their interface
depended on the multi-function network data structure a bit.
The actual multi-function implementations are still the same though.
2021-08-20 13:14:39 +02:00