- Added support for OSX CI builds and tests
- Cleaned up build scripts and moved to $ROOT/build_scripts
- On Linux: moved to trusty distro
- On Linux: enabled OpenMP, TBB and PTex build options
- On Linux: install and setup xvfb with newer mesa drivers to run our GL tests
- On Linux: enable GL tests
- added detection of shapes without UVs and report fatal error
- fixed command line parsing of shape file arguments and other options
- added missing UVs from shapes/catmark_fan
Read all comments and made corrections to files that aren't part of
OpenSubdiv itself but are packaged with it.
Commandline output of glPtexViewer is affected. Otherwise no functional
changes.
- updated base level tagging to ignore the boundary interpolation option
- updated regression shape for edge-only to illustrate behavior
- updated regression shapes to favor default viewng direction of examples
- overloaded utilities in regression/common to take existing Shape
- updated init_shapes.h to include all from regression/shapes
- all Shapes now created and refined regardless of content
- only "Hbr compatible" Shapes compared to Hbr, else print warning
- correctly initialize FVar tag and source entry for unconnected verts
- added regression/shape with unconnected vertices and fvar data
- fixed edge-face vector access when unconnected edges are last
Although valence 2 gregory patch is not well supported yet, this fix
mitigates artifacts around such a vertex.
Adding a shape catmark_gregory_test8 to see this issue.
- removed all of the multi-level Interpolate...() methods taking T*, U*
- made all single-level methods consistent wrt usage of T&, U&
- replaced usage in regressions, tutorials and examples
- additional minor improvements to far/tutorials
- added TopologyRefiner base level modifiers to TopologyRefinerFactoryBase
- removed old modifiers from TopologyRefiner (unused by anything else)
- updated existing Factory<MESH> definitions to use new methods
All examples, regression tests and tutorials directly looked into
opensubdiv source directory to grab the header files. This is somewhat
convenient during development but they can mistakenly access private
header files.
With this change, when OPENSUBDIV_INCLUDE_DIR is given to cmake,
it will be used as an include search path to build examples etc.
Otherwise it follows the same behavior as before.
Also replaces include references to the files in regression dir
to be relative, and cleanups some copy-paste patterns.
- created new class Far::PrimvarRefiner with interpolation methods
- removed interpolation and limit methods from Far::TopologyRefiner
- replaced internal usage in Far::StencilTableFactory
- replaced usage in regressions, tutorials and examples
- changed Vtr::LocalIndex to 16-bit integer from 8-bit
- added test shapes including valence 360 vertices
- disabled new shapes in far/regression until improved accuracy accepted
In OpenSubdiv 2.x, we encapsulated subdivision tables into
compute context in osd layer since those tables are order-dependent
and have to be applied in a certain manner. In 3.0, we adopted stencil
table based refinement. It's more simple and such an encapsulation is
no longer needed. Also 2.0 API has several ownership issues of GPU
kernel caching, and forces unnecessary instantiation of controllers
even though the cpu kernels typically don't need instances unlike GPU ones.
This change completely revisit osd client facing APIs. All contexts and
controllers were replaced with device-specific tables and evaluators.
While we can still use consistent API across various device backends,
unnecessary complexities have been removed. For example, cpu evaluator
is just a set of static functions and also there's no need to replicate
FarStencilTables to ComputeContext.
Also the new API delegates the ownership of compiled GPU kernels
to clients, for the better management of resources especially in multiple
GPU environment.
In addition to integrating ComputeController and EvalStencilController into
a single function Evaluator::EvalStencils(), EvalLimit API is also added
into Evaluator. This is working but still in progress, and we'll make a followup
change for the complete implementation.
-some naming convention changes:
GLSLTransformFeedback to GLXFBEvaluator
GLSLCompute to GLComputeEvaluator
-move LimitLocation struct into examples/glEvalLimit.
We're still discussing patch evaluation interface. Basically we'd like
to tease all ptex-specific parametrization out of far/osd layer.
TODO:
-implments EvalPatches() in the right way
-derivative evaluation API is still interim.
-VertexBufferDescriptor needs a better API to advance its location
-synchronization mechanism is not ideal (too global).
-OsdMesh class is hacky. need to fix it.
refactor CL/CUDA specific initialization stuffs into
examples/common/clDeviceContext and cudaDeviceContext, and
update examples to use those structs.
also
- remove CL/CUDA tests from osd_regression. The tests for those kernels will be covered by glImaging.
- update cuda initialization to use the GL-interoperable device if available.
- remove CL specialization from glShareTopology, following the same pattern as we took in the previous OsdGLMesh refactoring. (still something strange with XFB kernels though)
- fix file permissions.
Removed OpenCL/D3D11 specialization and add DEVICE_CONTEXT as a template
parameter. For the kernels which don't need a context object (e.g.
CPU, OpenGL, cuda) just ignore the context, and for the kernels which
use a context (e.g. OpenCL, DirectX) takes a context or a user-defined
class as which encapsulates device contexts. Note that OpenCL requires
two objects, cl_context and cl_command_queue. The user-defined
class must provide GetContext() and GetCommandQueue() for strongly typed
binding to osd VertexBuffers and ComputeContexts.
Osd::Mesh and MeshInterface have been used as a handy harness to host
multiple GPU kernels and graphics APIs. However it has CL/DirectX
specializations and duplicates large amount of plubming code. With this
change, glMesh.h and d3d11Mesh.h become just typedefs and all logic is
put into mesh.h without specializations.
Also cleaned up unused header files and code formatting.