- use unsigned ints only (where mixing signed/unsigned)
- turn heap_swap into an inline function, add SWAP_TVAL macro to swap values using a temp value as storage.
- added type checking SHIFT3/4 macros
also style cleanup for CTR_Map
transmission pass and filter glossy option.
The BSDF closure class is now more similar to the SVM closures, and includes
some flags and labels that are needed to properly categorize the BSDF's for
render passes. Phong closure is gone for the moment, needs to be adapated to
the new structure still.
- define array sizes for functions that take vectors.
- quiet some -Wshadow warnings.
- some copy/paste error in readfile.c made it set the same particle recalc flag twice.
1) object_fetch_transform_motion omits the per-object motion blur test (r51394), must use object_fetch_transform_motion_test.
2) KernelCamera.ndctoworld has been removed (r51402), do transform invert directly.
Background attributes are used as fallback in two cases:
1) Non-object light samples (e.g. lamp shaders)
2) Fallback if no implicit object attribute can be found
- move object_iterators.c --> view3d_iterators. (ED_object.h had to include ED_view3d.h which isn't so nice)
- move projection functions from view3d_view.c --> view3d_project.c (view3d_view was becoming a mishmash of utility functions and operators).
- some some cmake includes as system-includes.
The emitter visibility option is messy design, it makes such checks unnecessarily complicated. A better approach would be to allow non-mesh objects to carry particle data, these objects would just be invisible anyway without having to care about extra settings. However, this conflicts with the simplistic particle design of "owner is the emitter" ...
This makes it possible to do a border render inside a viewport even
when not looking through the camera.
Render border could be defined by Ctrl-B shortcut (works for both
camera render border and viewport render border).
Camera render border could still be defined using Shift-B (so no
muscule memory would be broken). Currently used a special flag of
operator to do this, otherwise you'll need to either two operators
with different poll callback or it could go into conflict with a
border zoom,
Border render of a viewport could be enabled/disabled in View
panel using "Render Border" option.
objects in the scene will also cause motion blur.
This change does come with a bit of a slow down to the CPU rendering kernel even
with motion blur disabled, due to extra overhead in handling of object matrices.
It's a few percentages on simpler scenes, not so noticeable on more complex ones.
With motion blur enabled rendering is of course also slower as would be expected,
though from testing especially GPU rendering handles it quite well.
This does not support motion blur from deforming objects yet, only translation,
scale and rotation. Deformation blur is probably for another release.