The links where added to the socket one after the other. However,
the virtual socket had a link limit of 1, so whenever a new link was
added, the previously added one was removed.
There is not really a reason for why the link limit should be 1 instead
of something higher. I'm setting it to the max value: `0xFFF`.
I'm also setting the `input_link_limit` to that value. Blender does not
need this currently, but addons might have input sockets that allow
more than one incident link.
The design for how we approach the "Everything Nodes" project
has changed. We will focus on a different part of the project initially.
While future me will likely refer back to some of the code I remove here,
there is no point in keeping this code around in master currently.
It would just confuse other developers working on the project.
This does not remove the simulation modifier and data block. Those are
just cleaned up, so that the boilerplate code can be reused in the future.
This flag specifies that even when the socket is not connected,
the node should not display the input field for the constant input
value. This is useful for inputs like Normal, which have special
handling for the missing input case and don't use a constant value.
Currently there is no way to change this flag from Python, and
through UI it can only be done by re-creating the socket.
This patch exposes the flag through RNA and UI, makes sure it
is properly updated when changed, and adds special handling to
ensure that it is correctly set when creating a node group from
a node set that includes reroute nodes.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8395
Object sockets work now, but only the new Object Transforms and the
Particle Mesh Emitter node use it. The emitter does not actually
use the mesh surface yet. Instead, new particles are just emitted around
the origin of the object.
Internally, handles to object data blocks are passed around in the network,
instead of raw object pointers. Using handles has a couple of benefits:
* The caller of the function has control over which handles can be resolved
and therefore limit access to specific data. The set of data blocks that
is accessed by a node tree should be known statically. This is necessary
for a proper integration with the dependency graph.
* When the pointer to an object changes (e.g. after restarting Blender),
all handles are still valid.
* When an object is deleted, the handle is invalidated without causing crashes.
* The handle is just an integer that can be stored per particle and can be cached easily.
The mapping between handles and their corresponding data blocks is
stored in the Simulation data block.
This also introduces the `blender::nodes` namespace. Eventually,
we want to move most/all of the node implementation files into
this namespace.
The reason for this file-move is that the code fits much better
into the `nodes` directory than in the `blenkernel` directory.
This adds new callbacks to `bNodeSocketType` and `bNodeType`.
Those are used to generate a multi-function network from a node
tree. Later, this network is evaluated on e.g. particle data.
Reviewers: brecht
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8169