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Just stubbed out for now, wanting to restore some octree overlays like
the old standalone sparkler had. Those can be wired up to settings so
rtv can occasionally show the spatial partition and matched particles.
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My current version of mingw in debian 9.11 doesn't seem to have
rand_r(), so let's just use plain rand() and lose the improved
parallelization on win builds.
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Modulo ticks by 2*M_PI to preserve precision by constraining the float
to 2*M_PI radians.
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Most modules find themselves wanting some kind of "t" value increasing
with time or frames rendered. It's common for them to create and
maintain this variable locally, incrementing it with every frame
rendered.
It may be interesting to introduce a global notion of ticks since
rototiller started, and have all modules derive their "t" value from
this instead of having their own private versions of it.
In future modules and general innovations it seems likely that playing
with time, like jumping it forwards and backwards to achieve some
visual effects, will be desirable. This isn't applicable to all
modules, but for many their entire visible state is derived from their
"t" value, making them entirely reversible.
This commit doesn't change any modules functionally, it only adds the
plumbing to pull a ticks value down to the modules from the core.
A ticks offset has also been introduced in preparation for supporting
dynamic shifting of the ticks value, though no API is added for doing
so yet.
It also seems likely an API will be needed for disabling the
time-based ticks advancement, with functions for explicitly setting
its value. If modules are created for incorporating external
sequencers and music coordination, they will almost certainly need to
manage the ticks value explicitly. When a sequencer jumps
forwards/backwards in the creative process, the module glue
responsible will need to keep ticks synchronized with the
sequencer/editor tool.
Before any of this can happen, we need ticks as a first-class core
thing shared by all modules.
Future commits will have to modify existing modules to use the ticks
appropriately, replacing their bespoke variants.
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This commit adds some fun features to the starfield:
- normalize aspect ratio to fragment size
- rolling viewport
- rotating viewport (with rate option)
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The existing code conflated the rendered frame dimensions with
what's essentially the virtual camera's film dimensions. That
resulted in a viewing frustum depending on the rendered frame
dimensions. Smaller frames (like in the montage module) would
show a smaller viewport into the same scene.
Now the view into the scene always shows the same viewport in
terms of the frustum dimensions for a given combination of
focal_length and film_{width,height}.
The rendered frame is essentially a sampling of the 2D plane
(the virtual film) intersecting the frustum.
Nothing is done to try enforce a specific aspect ratio or any
such magic. The caller is expected to manage this for now, or
just ignore it and let the output be stretched when the aspect
ratio of the output doesn't match the virtual film's aspect
ratio.
In the future it might be interesting to support letter boxing or
such things for preserving the film's aspect ratio.
For now the ray module just lets things be stretched, with
hard-coded film dimensions of something approximately consistent
with the past viewport.
The ray module could make some effort to fit the hard-coded film
dimensions to the runtime aspect ratio for the frame to be
rendered, tweaking things as needed but generally preserving the
general hard-coded dimensions. Allowing the frustum to be
minimally adjusted to fit the circumstances... that might also be
worth shoving into libray. Something of a automatic fitting
mode for the camera.
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Using the new puddle lib throw some raindrops on the framebuffer
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Switch to working through the set of modules in a random order,
randomizing the order once per cycle.
This way no modules get starved for display, which was pretty common
in the old method.
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draw stars as circles that get larger as the approach the camera
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This commit adds a module that emulates a spirograph
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Ideally the number of modules can tile without leaving gaps, but
as rototiller evolves over time modules are added piecemeal so
try accomodate those awkward layouts.
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- fix bug for square fragments
- use create and destroy context hooks instead of globals
- refactor to allow fragment resizing
- handle extremely small fragments gracefully
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- use a context not globals
- use floats and a "unit cube" to simulate the starfield
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Since 7a77cc1a landed this is no longer true, the .random member
will be used to support randomizing non multiple-choice settings.
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While the montage doesn't deeply thread the per-tile/module rendering,
the per-frame rendering is threaded with a work unit granularity of
every module's tile.
Meaning every module renders its tile in a single thread, but the
tiles are all rendered in parallel.
For the most part this works, and will only work better as more modules
are added to rototiller increasing the granularity. In the mean time
it's a bit coarse and some modules can be a lot more costly to render
than others, and there can be a shortage of modules to schedule on idle
CPUs.
It would be an interesting task to try make each module's tile get
subfragmented elastically. I didn't make any attempt to do that, but
it might even be worthwhile on hidpi screens where even those small
tiles may have a whole lot of pixels, especially on manycore CPUs.
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This requires a forward declaration of v3f_t and changing din()
to take a v3f_t *.
The swab module needed updating to supply a pointer type and a
v3f_t definition.
This is being done so din.h users can have their own v3f
implementations. I might consolidate all the duplicated vector
code scattered throughout the libs and modules, but for now I'm
carrying on with the original intention of having modules be
largely self-contained. Though the introduction of libs like
ray and din has certainly violated that a bit already.
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Since snow_context_t needs another member anyways, stick n_cpus in there
to inform the fragmenter of precisely how many fragments to make.
This renderer doesn't benefit from tiling or any such locality, so it uses
the slice fragmenter and really only benefits from as many fragments as there
are CPUs. Any additional fragments is just wasted fragmenting overhead.
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Snow was already threaded, but used a global seed with rand_r() meaning
the CPUs were hammering on the same address. There wasn't any locking or
atomics, as it isn't terribly critical when generating white noise if the
seed access is racy. But the writes still caused cache lines to ping-pong.
This commit gives a ~15.5% speedup in my measurements on an i7-2640M.
Note without the padded union, using just an array of ints, zero gain
is realized. I used a padding of 256 just to have some headroom, x86
is 64 but other CPUs vary, POWER9 is 128 for example.
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This repurposes the generic fb_fragment_tile_single() to better fit
the montage use case.
Partially covered areas are simply skipped, and tiles no longer need
to be square.
In determining the tile width and height, I'm just using the sqrt of
the number of modules and dividing the frame width and height. But
when the sqrt has a fraction, it's rounded up on the width divide
and rounded down on the height divide. So the width gets the extra
column of tiles, and the height just throws away the fraction.
I think it's OK for now, until someone gets a bug up their ass and
wants to avoid having vacant tiles in the bottom right corner when
the number of modules doesn't cooperate.
One problem with the just skipping partially covered areas is they
don't get zeroed out - no fragment is ever generated for them.
To fix that there will prolly have to be a fb_fragment_zero() of
the frame @ prepare :(. I guess it wouldn't be the end of the
world if the fragmenter itself zeroed out skipped regions. It's
kind of an ugly layering violation but this is a private montage-
specific fragmenter.
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The old approach was just to get things working, it's preferable
to not have empty tiles on-screen where modules were skipped and
have all tiles be smaller to accomodate vacancies.
Now the modules list gets pruned @ context create, so the skipping
only happens once and everywhere else is looking at a modules list
and count of only the keepers.
I also added stars to the skipped modules, for now, since both stars
and pixbounce malfunction when the fragment size changes.
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Not doing this produces especially visible artifacts when shown
by rtv.
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Segfaults were observed when montage came up in rtv, since pixbounce
doesn't seem to be rendering properly at all just skip it for now.
I suspect what's happening is rtv ran pixbounce before running montage,
and pixbounce caches fragment knowledge @ initialization. So when
montage ran pixbounce in a tile, that stale fragment knowledge was used
and caused scribbling.
Stars probably has similar problems actually.
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This is somewhat unfinished as it uses the generic tiled fragmenter
that's not interested in appearances but prioritizes total coverage
and simplicity.
Montage should have its own tiler that can produce non-square and even
non-uniform tile dimensions, prioritizing filling the screen with
mostly-uniform tiles.
But that's a TODO item, this is good enough for now and exercises some
fragment details previously irrelevant and often ignored/broken in
modules.
The pixbounce module in particular seems completely broken with small
fragment sizes.
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Mechanical change removing abbreviation for consistency
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Mostly mechanical change, though threads.c needed some jiggering to
make the logical cpu id available to the worker threads.
Now render_fragment() can easily addresss per-cpu data created by
create_context().
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Back in the day, there was no {create,destroy}_context(), so passing
num_cpus to just prepare_frame made sense. Modules then would
implicitly initialize themselves on the first prepare_frame() call
using a static initialized variable.
Since then things have been decomposed a bit for more sophisticated
(and cleaner) modules. It can be necessary to allocate per-cpu data
structures and the natural place to do that is @ create_context(). So
this commit wires that up.
A later commit will probably have to plumb a "current cpu" identifier
into the render_fragment() function. Because a per-cpu data structure
isn't particularly useful if you can't easily address it from within
your execution context.
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This makes the visualization more interesting by adding more variety.
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To facilitate random setting of these flexible string-oriented
settings, support a random helper supplied with the description.
This helper would return a valid random string to be used with the
respective setting being described.
Immediate use case is the rtv module, which also gets fixed up to
use it in this commit.
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This is just a quick stab at randomizing settings, only multiple
choice setings are randomized currently.
For modules with settings, a new Settings: field is added to the
caption showing the settings as the arguments one would pass to
rototiller's module argument.
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This maps a different Z-slice through the noise field to each color
channel. The slices are moved up and down through the field over
time, and the size of the area each color samples is tweaked a bit
to make them less coherent with the noise field cells.
It could be improved, but I think the output is already neat enough
to be worth sharing.
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Consolidate the time() calls in setup_next_module() by using a now
variable.
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This broke when snow was added.
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The idea is to have captions similar to how MTV did back in the 80s.
It'd be nice to make the text resolution independent, but this is a
good first stab for an afternoon of tooling around.
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This simplifies the bsp code while addressing cleanup
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This assert prevents using the chunker for efficient freeing,
maybe in the future add a flag for toggling this but for now
it can just be commented out.
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particles_free() didn't do all the necessary cleanup.
bsp_free() remains mostly unimplemented. I think this wasn't done at
the time because I was thinking bsp.c should use the chunker, then
cleanup is just a matter of freeing the chunker instead of traversing
the bsp.
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This uses the newly added snow module as a transition between modules
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I wanted to add some noise to the rtv module and figured why not
just add a snow module and make rtv pass through it briefly when
switching modules.
It's not interesting by itself, but as more composite/meta modules
like rtv get made it might be handy beyond rtv.
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This is sort of a meta renderer, as it simply renders other
modules in its prepare_frame() stage. They're still threaded
as the newly public rototiller_module_render() utilizes the
threading machinery, it just needs to be called from the serial
phase @ prepare_frame().
I'm pretty sure this module will leak memory every time it changes
modules, since the existing cleanup paths for the modules hasn't
needed to be thorough in the least. So that's something to fix
in a later commit, go through all the modules and make sure their
destroy_context() entrypoints actually cleans everything up.
See the source for some rtv-specific TODOs.
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color banding has been quite visible, and somewhat expected with a
direct conversion from the linear float color space to the 8-bit
integral rgb color components.
A simple lookup table is used here to non-linearly map the values, table
generation is taken from Greg Ward's REAL PIXELS gem in Graphics Gems II.
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Initially I was going to make 32 vs. 64 be a setting, but decided
now that SDL is supported it's fairly likely there will be odd fb
dimensions (arbitrary window sizes). Since this never really brought
anything of significant value, just drop the version that mostly
just demonstrated how to pack multiple pixels into a single u64 write
to the framebuffer more than anything else.
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This removes the submit-softly module, instead using a runtime
setting to toggle bilinear interpolation on the submit module.
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Viscosity and diffusion are supported, it'd be neat to add a
configurable size (the ROOT define) for the flow field in the
future.
I didn't go crazy here, it's just a list of orders of magnitude you
choose from for each. It'd probably be more interesting to change
this into a single knob with descriptive names like "smoke" "goop"
"water" mapping to a LUT.
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s/Joe/Jos/, I should wear my glasses more.
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This implements near verbatim the code found in the paper titled:
Real-Time Fluid Dynamics for Games
By Jos Stam
It sometimes has the filename GDC03.PDF, or Stam_fluids_GDC03.pdf
The density field is rendered using simple linear interpolation of
the samples, in a grayscale palette. No gamma correction is being
performed.
There are three configurable defines of interest:
VISCOSITY, DIFFUSION, and ROOT.
This module is only threaded in the drawing stage, so basically the
linear interpolation uses multiple cores. The simulation itself is
not threaded, the implementation from the paper made no such
considerations.
It would be nice to reimplement this in a threaded fashion with a
good generalized API, then move it into libs. Something where a unit
square can be sampled for interpolated densities would be nice.
Then extend it into 3 dimensions for volumetric effects...
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