This resolves a long list of linker warnings that is currently only showing up on macOS arm builds.
The warnings themselves are of this shape (one example):
```
ld: warning: direct access in function 'Manta::MeshDataImpl<Manta::Vector3D<float> >::_W_39(_object, object, object*)' from file '../../lib/libextern_mantaflow.a(mesh.h.reg.cpp.o)' to global weak symbol 'typeinfo for Manta::MeshDataImpl<Manta::Vector3D<float> >' from file '../../lib/libextern_mantaflow.a(mesh.cpp.o)' means the weak symbol cannot be overridden at runtime. This was likely caused by different translation units being compiled with different visibility settings.
```
Just would like to get your opinion to make sure this is an acceptable way to handle this on all platforms.
Reviewed By: LazyDodo
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D9002
This patch changes openvdb from a static to a dynamic library.
this is in preparation for enabling pyopenvdb at some point
in the future.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D8282
Reviewed by: brecht
Adjusted the fluid build system so that plugins that depend on numpy can be compiled as well.
Note that in this commit numpy support is still disabled. It can be enabled by re-running the Mantaflow update script with USE_NUMPY=1 and enabling WITH_MANTA_NUMPY in extern/mantaflow/CMakeLists.txt. This will happen in a future commit.
No longer including unused dependencies. Should numpy IO be needed at some point, the Manta source update script can be configured so that the required dependencies are included again.
This updated set of Mantaflow files includes the improved OpenVDB file IO. With this update it is finally possible to store multiple grids per file. It is also possible to save particle systems and particle data to OpenVDB files.
Updates include:
- std::move() cleanup in rcmatrix.h
- Enabled parallelization for fluid guiding (fairly noticeable speed improvement).
- More flexible flags setter function with control over boundary width.
Updates include:
- A fix from Jacques that changed the loop order in the mesh creation function (the fix speeds up the function significantly due to fewer cache misses).
- Some of the grid copy helper functions are now multithreaded.
- A fix for Windows file IO. Now it possible to load files with non ASCII characters on Windows too.
MSVC has a conformance mode (/permissive-) where the C++ standard is more strictly
enforced. This mode is available on MSVC 15.5+ [1]
This patch enables this mode on compilers that support it and cleans up the few violations it threw up in the process.
- Mantaflow was using M_PI without requesting them using the _USE_MATH_DEFINES define to opt in to non default behaviour.
- Collada did not include the right header for std::cerr, this seemingly was fixed for other platforms already but put inside a platform guard.
- Ghost had some scoping issues regarding uninitialized variables and goto behaviour
Second landing of this patch, earlier commit was reverted due to some compiler configurations having slipped though testing
[1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/permissive-standards-conformance
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D6824
Reviewed By: brecht
It is breaking compilation on some configurations, revert for now while
i see what is wrong.
This reverts commit 9fe469c110940af5d2525158305d5d365bd15276.
MSVC has a conformance mode (/permissive-) where the C++ standard is more strictly
enforced. This mode is available on MSVC 15.5+ [1]
This patch enables this mode on compilers that support it and cleans up the few violations it threw up in the process.
- Mantaflow was using M_PI without requesting them using the _USE_MATH_DEFINES define to opt in to non default behaviour.
- Collada did not include the right header for std::cerr, this seemingly was fixed for other platforms already but put inside a platform guard.
- Ghost had some scoping issues regarding uninitialized variables and goto behaviour
[1] https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/reference/permissive-standards-conformance
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D6824
Reviewed By: brecht
This is a more correct fix to the issue Brecht was fixing in D6600.
While the fix in that patch worked fine for linking it broke ASAN
runtime under some circumstances.
For example, `make full debug developer` would compile, but trying
to start blender will cause assert failure in ASAN (related on check
that ASAN is not running already).
Top-level idea: leave it to CMake to keep track of dependency graph.
The root of the issue comes to the fact that target like "blender" is
configured to use a lot of static libraries coming from Blender sources
and to use external static libraries. There is nothing which ensures
order between blender's and external libraries. Only order of blender
libraries is guaranteed.
It was possible that due to a cycle or other circumstances some of
blender libraries would have been passed to linker after libraries
it uses, causing linker errors.
For example, this order will likely fail:
libbf_blenfont.a libfreetype6.a libbf_blenfont.a
This change makes it so blender libraries are explicitly provided
their dependencies to an external libraries, which allows CMake to
ensure they are always linked against them.
General rule here: if bf_foo depends on an external library it is
to be provided to LIBS for bf_foo.
For example, if bf_blenkernel depends on opensubdiv then LIBS in
blenkernel's CMakeLists.txt is to include OPENSUBDIB_LIBRARIES.
The change is made based on searching for used include folders
such as OPENSUBDIV_INCLUDE_DIRS and adding corresponding libraries
to LIBS ion that CMakeLists.txt. Transitive dependencies are not
simplified by this approach, but I am not aware of any downside of
this: CMake should be smart enough to simplify them on its side.
And even if not, this shouldn't affect linking time.
Benefit of not relying on transitive dependencies is that build
system is more robust towards future changes. For example, if
bf_intern_opensubiv is no longer depends on OPENSUBDIV_LIBRARIES
and all such code is moved to bf_blenkernel this will not break
linking.
The not-so-trivial part is change to blender_add_lib (and its
version in Cycles). The complexity is caused by libraries being
provided as a single list argument which doesn't allow to use
different release and debug libraries on Windows. The idea is:
- Have every library prefixed as "optimized" or "debug" if
separation is needed (non-prefixed libraries will be considered
"generic").
- Loop through libraries passed to function and do simple parsing
which will look for "optimized" and "debug" words and specify
following library to corresponding category.
This isn't something particularly great. Alternative would be to
use target_link_libraries() directly, which sounds like more code
but which is more explicit and allows to have more flexibility
and control comparing to wrapper approach.
Tested the following configurations on Linux, macOS and Windows:
- make full debug developer
- make full release developer
- make lite debug developer
- make lite release developer
NOTE: Linux libraries needs to be compiled with D6641 applied,
otherwise, depending on configuration, it's possible to run into
duplicated zlib symbols error.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D6642
This aligns with the VFX reference platform 2020 along with the decision
to stick to Python 3.7, see T68774.
Blosc was downgraded to 1.5 as recommended by the OpenVDB documentation.
IlmBase and OpenEXR are now built together with CMake rather separately
using autoconf.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D6593
A bug in llvm < 9.0.1 causes the compiler to crash when
openmp is enabled. Since mantaflow uses tbb we can safely
disable this flag temporarily for this module.
Reviewed By: sebbas
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D6446