blender/intern/CMakeLists.txt

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CMake
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# ***** BEGIN GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
# modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License
# as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2
# of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
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# Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
#
# The Original Code is Copyright (C) 2006, Blender Foundation
# All rights reserved.
#
# The Original Code is: all of this file.
#
# Contributor(s): Jacques Beaurain.
#
# ***** END GPL LICENSE BLOCK *****
# add_subdirectory(atomic) # header only
add_subdirectory(string)
add_subdirectory(ghost)
add_subdirectory(guardedalloc)
add_subdirectory(libmv)
add_subdirectory(memutil)
add_subdirectory(opencolorio)
add_subdirectory(mikktspace)
add_subdirectory(glew-mx)
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add_subdirectory(eigen)
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if(WITH_GAMEENGINE_DECKLINK)
BGE: DeckLink card support for video capture and streaming. You can capture and stream video in the BGE using the DeckLink video cards from Black Magic Design. You need a card and Desktop Video software version 10.4 or above to use these features in the BGE. Many thanks to Nuno Estanquiero who tested the patch extensively on a variety of Decklink products, it wouldn't have been possible without his help. You can find a brief summary of the decklink features here: https://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Source/GameEngine/Decklink The full API details and samples are in the Python API documentation. bge.texture.VideoDeckLink(format, capture=0): Use this object to capture a video stream. the format argument describes the video and pixel formats and the capture argument the card number. This object can be used as a source for bge.texture.Texture so that the frame is sent to the GPU, or by itself using the new refresh method to get the video frame in a buffer. The frames are usually not in RGB but in YUV format (8bit or 10bit); they require a shader to extract the RGB components in the GPU. Details and sample shaders in the documentation. 3D video capture is supported: the frames are double height with left and right eyes in top-bottom order. The 'eye' uniform (see setUniformEyef) can be used to sample the 3D frame when the BGE is also in stereo mode. This allows to composite a 3D video stream with a 3D scene and render it in stereo. In Windows, and if you have a nVidia Quadro GPU, you can benefit of an additional performance boost by using 'GPUDirect': a method to send a video frame to the GPU without going through the OGL driver. The 'pinned memory' OGL extension is also supported (only on high-end AMD GPU) with the same effect. bge.texture.DeckLink(cardIdx=0, format=""): Use this object to send video frame to a DeckLink card. Only the immediate mode is supported, the scheduled mode is not implemented. This object is similar to bge.texture.Texture: you need to attach a image source and call refresh() to compute and send the frame to the card. This object is best suited for video keying: a video stream (not captured) flows through the card and the frame you send to the card are displayed above it (the card does the compositing automatically based on the alpha channel). At the time of this commit, 3D video keying is supported in the BGE but not in the DeckLink card due to a color space issue.
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add_subdirectory(decklink)
endif()
if(WITH_AUDASPACE)
add_subdirectory(audaspace)
endif()
if(WITH_MOD_REMESH)
add_subdirectory(dualcon)
endif()
if(WITH_MOD_FLUID)
add_subdirectory(elbeem)
endif()
if(WITH_MOD_SMOKE)
add_subdirectory(smoke)
endif()
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if(WITH_IK_SOLVER)
add_subdirectory(iksolver)
endif()
if(WITH_IK_ITASC)
add_subdirectory(itasc)
endif()
if(WITH_GAMEENGINE)
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add_subdirectory(moto)
endif()
if(WITH_CYCLES)
add_subdirectory(cycles)
endif()
if(WITH_INTERNATIONAL)
add_subdirectory(locale)
endif()
if(WITH_BULLET)
add_subdirectory(rigidbody)
endif()
OpenSubdiv: Commit of OpenSubdiv integration into Blender This commit contains all the remained parts needed for initial integration of OpenSubdiv into Blender's subdivision surface code. Includes both GPU and CPU backends which works in the following way: - When SubSurf modifier is the last in the modifiers stack then GPU pipeline of OpenSubdiv is used, making viewport performance as fast as possible. This also requires graphscard with GLSL 1.5 support. If this requirement is not met, then no GPU pipeline is used at all. - If SubSurf is not a last modifier or if DerivesMesh is being evaluated for rendering then CPU limit evaluation API from OpenSubdiv is used. This only replaces the legacy evaluation code from CCGSubSurf_legacy, but keeps CCG structures exactly the same as they used to be for ages now. This integration is fully covered with ifdef and not enabled by default because there are several TODOs to be solved first: - Face varying data interpolation is not really cleanly implemented for GPU in OpenSubdiv 3.0. It is also not implemented for limit evaluation API. This basically means we'll have really hard time supporting UVs. - Limit evaluation only works with adaptivly subdivided meshes so far, which basically means all the points of CCG are pushed to the limit. This gives different result from old code. - There are some serious optimizations possible on the topology refiner creation, which would speed up initial OpenSubdiv mesh creation. - There are some hardcoded asumptions in the GPU and DerivedMesh areas which could be generalized. That's something where Antony and Campbell can help, making it so the code is structured in a way which is reusable by all planned viewport projects. - There are also some workarounds in the dependency graph to make sure OpenGL buffers are only freed from the main thread. Those who'll be wanting to make experiments with this code should grab dev branch (NOT master) from https://github.com/Nazg-Gul/OpenSubdiv/tree/dev There are some patches applied in there which we're working on on getting into upstream.
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if(WITH_OPENSUBDIV)
add_subdirectory(opensubdiv)
endif()
# only windows needs utf16 converter
BGE: DeckLink card support for video capture and streaming. You can capture and stream video in the BGE using the DeckLink video cards from Black Magic Design. You need a card and Desktop Video software version 10.4 or above to use these features in the BGE. Many thanks to Nuno Estanquiero who tested the patch extensively on a variety of Decklink products, it wouldn't have been possible without his help. You can find a brief summary of the decklink features here: https://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Source/GameEngine/Decklink The full API details and samples are in the Python API documentation. bge.texture.VideoDeckLink(format, capture=0): Use this object to capture a video stream. the format argument describes the video and pixel formats and the capture argument the card number. This object can be used as a source for bge.texture.Texture so that the frame is sent to the GPU, or by itself using the new refresh method to get the video frame in a buffer. The frames are usually not in RGB but in YUV format (8bit or 10bit); they require a shader to extract the RGB components in the GPU. Details and sample shaders in the documentation. 3D video capture is supported: the frames are double height with left and right eyes in top-bottom order. The 'eye' uniform (see setUniformEyef) can be used to sample the 3D frame when the BGE is also in stereo mode. This allows to composite a 3D video stream with a 3D scene and render it in stereo. In Windows, and if you have a nVidia Quadro GPU, you can benefit of an additional performance boost by using 'GPUDirect': a method to send a video frame to the GPU without going through the OGL driver. The 'pinned memory' OGL extension is also supported (only on high-end AMD GPU) with the same effect. bge.texture.DeckLink(cardIdx=0, format=""): Use this object to send video frame to a DeckLink card. Only the immediate mode is supported, the scheduled mode is not implemented. This object is similar to bge.texture.Texture: you need to attach a image source and call refresh() to compute and send the frame to the card. This object is best suited for video keying: a video stream (not captured) flows through the card and the frame you send to the card are displayed above it (the card does the compositing automatically based on the alpha channel). At the time of this commit, 3D video keying is supported in the BGE but not in the DeckLink card due to a color space issue.
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# gpudirect is a runtime interface to the nVidia's DVP driver, only for windows
if(WIN32)
add_subdirectory(utfconv)
BGE: DeckLink card support for video capture and streaming. You can capture and stream video in the BGE using the DeckLink video cards from Black Magic Design. You need a card and Desktop Video software version 10.4 or above to use these features in the BGE. Many thanks to Nuno Estanquiero who tested the patch extensively on a variety of Decklink products, it wouldn't have been possible without his help. You can find a brief summary of the decklink features here: https://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Source/GameEngine/Decklink The full API details and samples are in the Python API documentation. bge.texture.VideoDeckLink(format, capture=0): Use this object to capture a video stream. the format argument describes the video and pixel formats and the capture argument the card number. This object can be used as a source for bge.texture.Texture so that the frame is sent to the GPU, or by itself using the new refresh method to get the video frame in a buffer. The frames are usually not in RGB but in YUV format (8bit or 10bit); they require a shader to extract the RGB components in the GPU. Details and sample shaders in the documentation. 3D video capture is supported: the frames are double height with left and right eyes in top-bottom order. The 'eye' uniform (see setUniformEyef) can be used to sample the 3D frame when the BGE is also in stereo mode. This allows to composite a 3D video stream with a 3D scene and render it in stereo. In Windows, and if you have a nVidia Quadro GPU, you can benefit of an additional performance boost by using 'GPUDirect': a method to send a video frame to the GPU without going through the OGL driver. The 'pinned memory' OGL extension is also supported (only on high-end AMD GPU) with the same effect. bge.texture.DeckLink(cardIdx=0, format=""): Use this object to send video frame to a DeckLink card. Only the immediate mode is supported, the scheduled mode is not implemented. This object is similar to bge.texture.Texture: you need to attach a image source and call refresh() to compute and send the frame to the card. This object is best suited for video keying: a video stream (not captured) flows through the card and the frame you send to the card are displayed above it (the card does the compositing automatically based on the alpha channel). At the time of this commit, 3D video keying is supported in the BGE but not in the DeckLink card due to a color space issue.
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add_subdirectory(gpudirect)
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endif()
if(WITH_OPENVDB)
add_subdirectory(openvdb)
endif()