Crash was happening on windows platforms only and was caused
by some specifics about how CRT works.
Basically, blender and all of the .dll are compiled with /MT
flag, which means blender.exe and all .dll are using separate
environments. This makes it impossible to pass file descriptors
from blender to other dll, because it becomes invalid in the dll.
And this is exactly what was happening: OIIO was trying to open
movie file with all known plugins and one of them was zlib. And
the way OIIO was using zlib API is opening the file using Boost
and passing a file descriptor to zlib. And since zlib was a
dynamic library this lead to general issues using this descriptor
in zlib code.
Solved by linking to zlib statically. This allows to safely pass
file descriptor to zlib API. Alternative would be to compile all
the stuff with /MD flag, but that's much bigger and less robust
way to fix the issue.
Tested on windows using msvc2008, scons plus cmake both 32 and 64
bit versions. Seems to be working fine.
Further tweaks for mingw and msvc2012 could be needed tho.
- Extending CMakeLists.txt to support builds with VC2012.
- Fix some typo in CMakeLists.txt
- Introduces experimental WITH_AVX_CPU to build with /arch:AVX (VC11 only)
Makes code in tracking.cc much easier to understand and modify,
without worring to breck compulation with Libmv disabled.
It is still possible compilation will break due to libmv-capi
changes, but that's not happening so much often.
- enable site-packages for bundled python distrobution, py3.2 had a problem where it would try to parse headers we didnt include, but its resolved now.
- workaround for glitch I was having on arch-linux where lib64 would be be used for the bundled python directory when it was just a symlink.
Conflicts resolved:
source/blenderplayer/bad_level_call_stubs/SConscript
Partly reverted changes to intern/cycles/blender/addon/ui.py in revision 52899
to make it easier to merge trunk changes.
Resolved conflicts:
release/datafiles/startup.blend
source/blender/editors/space_nla/nla_buttons.c
Also updated source/blender/blenkernel/intern/linestyle.c as a follow-up of
recent changes for the use of bool.
This patch allows Blender to display i18n monospace font in the text
editor and the Python interactive console. Wide characters that occupy
multiple columns such as CJK characters can be displayed correctly.
Furthermore, wrapping, selection, suggestion, cursor drawing, and
syntax highlighting should work.
Also fixes a bug [#34543]: In Text Editor false color in comment on cyrillic
To estimate how many columns each character occupies, this patch uses
wcwidth.c written by Markus Kuhn and distributed under MIT-style license:
http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/ucs/wcwidth.c
wcwidth.c is stored in extern/wcwidth and used as a static library.
This patch adds new API to blenfont, blenlib and blenkernel:
BLF_get_unifont_mono()
BLF_free_unifont_mono()
BLF_draw_mono()
BLI_wcwidth()
BLI_wcswidth()
BLI_str_utf8_char_width()
BLI_str_utf8_char_width_safe()
txt_utf8_offset_to_column()
txt_utf8_column_to_offset()
This option allow Blender to be linked against the Framework python
It's useful if you want to have blenderplayer and bpy in the same application and need to avoid PyThread problems.
patch reviewed by Jens Verwiebe before 2.66. He may want to change something though.
(also small: I changed:
/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions//python
by
/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions//Python
as the latter seems to be the norm)
SSBA seemed to be working OK last time i've checked it
with MSVC and optimization enabled.
Also, we'll likely replace it with own BA soon, which
works fine with MSVC anyway.
find ldl symbols because order of libraries seems to be critical
for gcc linker.
A bit stupid, but that's how linker works..
Both CMake and SCons shall work fine on linux now.
Root of the issue goes to SSBA library which didn't work
properly when using optimization in MSVC. It was worked
around by disabling optimization for libmv, which is in
fact shame and shouldn't have been done.
It seems after some changes optimization does not affect
on SSBA code, but enabling optimization could be risky so
close to release.
For now solved by splitting SSBA to separate CMake/SCons
library, disabling optimization only for this particular
library and enabling optimization for rest of libmv.
Tested on all files which used to fail with optimization
enabled in SSBA and all of them works the same as before.
Tracking speed is significantly higher now.
After release we'll enable optimization for SSBA as well,
so there'll be no crappy build setup. Later we'll replace
old SSBA library with new BA code based on Ceres.
Bundle script would be broken for until then, so better
not to use it.
This modules does not depend on any blender-specific data
structures or algorithms and due to our policy better be
placed to intern/
Shall be no functional changes, tested CMake and SCons on
Linux, hopefully other platforms will work as well.
P.S. SVN history shall be preserved for the files.
It's mostly a C API for bullet that interfaces nicely with blender.
It could act as a generic interface for rigid body simulations but right
now it's very specific to bullet.
TODO: Fix building without bullet.
Part of GSoC 2010 and 2012.
Authors: Joshua Leung (aligorith), Sergej Reich (sergof)
Note: this doesn't work yet for everything with latest stable bullet (2.81), need to look into why and likely apply some patches upstream.
However I managed to link blender by disabling some features, likely it can be made to work without too much trouble.
RangeTree is a simple C++ tree set for storing non-overlapping scalar
ranges. Original source from:
https://github.com/nicholasbishop/RangeTree
Also update the build systems to include RangeTree.
This commit adds a small and simplistic C wrapper around boost's locale library as intern/locale, and heavily simplifies/reduces Blender's own i18n code (under blenfont/ dir). And it adds back UI translation on windows' official builds (with msvc)!
Note to platform maintainers: iconv and gettext (libintl) can now be removed from precompiled libs (not gettext binaries, under windows, of course ;) ).
Note to MinGW32/64 users: boost_locale lib has not yet been uploaded for those build env, please disable WITH_INTERNATIONAL for now (hopefully will be fixed very soon, have contacted psy-fy).
Conflicts resolved:
source/blender/blenloader/intern/readfile.c
source/blender/bmesh/operators/bmo_utils.c
This commit also includes a fix of a bug identified during the merge and committed in revision 51853.
Thanks Thomas (dingto) for the timely fix!
* Moved kernel/osl/nodes to kernel/shaders
* Renamed standard attributes to use geom:, particle:, object: prefixes
* Update stdosl.h to properly reflect the closures we support
* Fix the wrong stdosl.h being used for building shaders
* Add geom:numpolyvertices, geom:trianglevertices, geom:polyvertices attributes
Conflicts resolved:
source/blender/blenloader/intern/readfile.c
source/blender/render/intern/source/convertblender.c
source/blender/render/intern/source/pipeline.c
Also addressed code inconsistency due to changes in the trunk revision 50628 (color
management with OCIO) and 50806 (UV project material). OCIO-related changes are marked
OCIO_TODO as in some other files modified in revision 50628.
Replace old color pipeline which was supporting linear/sRGB color spaces
only with OpenColorIO-based pipeline.
This introduces two configurable color spaces:
- Input color space for images and movie clips. This space is used to convert
images/movies from color space in which file is saved to Blender's linear
space (for float images, byte images are not internally converted, only input
space is stored for such images and used later).
This setting could be found in image/clip data block settings.
- Display color space which defines space in which particular display is working.
This settings could be found in scene's Color Management panel.
When render result is being displayed on the screen, apart from converting image
to display space, some additional conversions could happen.
This conversions are:
- View, which defines tone curve applying before display transformation.
These are different ways to view the image on the same display device.
For example it could be used to emulate film view on sRGB display.
- Exposure affects on image exposure before tone map is applied.
- Gamma is post-display gamma correction, could be used to match particular
display gamma.
- RGB curves are user-defined curves which are applying before display
transformation, could be used for different purposes.
All this settings by default are only applying on render result and does not
affect on other images. If some particular image needs to be affected by this
transformation, "View as Render" setting of image data block should be set to
truth. Movie clips are always affected by all display transformations.
This commit also introduces configurable color space in which sequencer is
working. This setting could be found in scene's Color Management panel and
it should be used if such stuff as grading needs to be done in color space
different from sRGB (i.e. when Film view on sRGB display is use, using VD16
space as sequencer's internal space would make grading working in space
which is close to the space using for display).
Some technical notes:
- Image buffer's float buffer is now always in linear space, even if it was
created from 16bit byte images.
- Space of byte buffer is stored in image buffer's rect_colorspace property.
- Profile of image buffer was removed since it's not longer meaningful.
- OpenGL and GLSL is supposed to always work in sRGB space. It is possible
to support other spaces, but it's quite large project which isn't so
much important.
- Legacy Color Management option disabled is emulated by using None display.
It could have some regressions, but there's no clear way to avoid them.
- If OpenColorIO is disabled on build time, it should make blender behaving
in the same way as previous release with color management enabled.
More details could be found at this page (more details would be added soon):
http://wiki.blender.org/index.php/Dev:Ref/Release_Notes/2.64/Color_Management
--
Thanks to Xavier Thomas, Lukas Toene for initial work on OpenColorIO
integration and to Brecht van Lommel for some further development and code/
usecase review!