* Added support for uchar4 attributes to Cycles' attribute system.
* This is used for Vertex Colors now, which saves some memory (4 unsigned characters, instead of 4 floats).
* GPU Texture Limit on sm_20 and sm_21 decreased from 95 to 94, because we need a new texture for the uchar4 attributes. This is no problem for sm_30 or newer.
Part of my GSoC 2014.
Instead of pre-calculation and storage, we now calculate the face normal during render.
This gives a small slowdown (~1%) but decreases memory usage, which is especially important for GPUs,
where you have limited VRAM.
Part of my GSoC 2014.
This makes the code a bit easier to understand, and might come in handy
if we want to reuse more Embree code.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D482
Code by Brecht, with fixes by Lockal, Sergey and myself.
This caused a couple of fireflies in koro_final.blend. The wrong normal would
cause the shading point to be set as backfacing, which triggered another bug
with hair BSDFs on the backface of hair curves. That one is not fixed yet but
there's a comment in the code about it now.
Old algorithm:
Raytrace from one transparent surface to the next step by step. To minimize
overhead in cases where we don't need transparent shadows, we first trace a
regular shadow ray. We check if the hit primitive was potentially transparent,
and only in that case start marching. this gives extra ray cast for the cases
were we do want transparency.
New algorithm:
We trace a single ray. If it hits any opaque surface, or more than a given
number of transparent surfaces is hit, then we consider the geometry to be
entirely blocked. If not, all transparent surfaces will be recorded and we
will shade them one by one to determine how much light is blocked. This all
happens in one scene intersection function.
Recording all hits works well in some cases but may be slower in others. If
we have many semi-transparent hairs, one intersection may be faster because
you'd be reinteresecting the same hairs a lot with each step otherwise. If
however there is mostly binary transparency then we may be recording many
unnecessary intersections when one of the first surfaces blocks all light.
We found that this helps quite nicely in some scenes, on koro.blend this can
give a 50% reduction in render time, on the pabellon barcelona scene and a
forest scene with transparent leaves it was 30%. Some other files rendered
maybe 1% or 2% slower, but this seems a reasonable tradeoff.
Differential Revision: https://developer.blender.org/D473
These are internally stored as a 3D image textures, but accessible like e.g.
UV coordinates though the attribute node and getattribute().
This is convenient for rendering e.g. smoke objects where data like density is
really a property of the mesh, and it avoids having to specify the smoke object
in a texture node, instead the material will work with any smoke domain.
This now supports multiple steps and subframe sampling of motion.
There is one difference for object and camera transform motion blur. It still
only supports two steps there, but the transforms are now sampled at subframe
times instead of the previous and next frame and then interpolated/extrapolated.
This will give different render results in some cases but it's more accurate.
Part of the code is from the summer of code project by Gavin Howard, but it has
been significantly rewritten and extended.