ViewVC Help
View File | Revision Log | Show Annotations | Download File | Root Listing
root/radiance/ray/doc/man/man1/genBSDF.1
Revision: 1.8
Committed: Tue Aug 23 14:02:41 2011 UTC (13 years, 8 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.7: +2 -2 lines
Log Message:
Increased default sampling to -c 10000

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 greg 1.8 .\" RCSid $Id: genBSDF.1,v 1.7 2011/06/24 00:41:51 greg Exp $
2 greg 1.1 .TH GENBSDF 1 9/3/2010 RADIANCE
3     .SH NAME
4     genBSDF - generate BSDF description from Radiance or MGF input
5     .SH SYNOPSIS
6     .B genBSDF
7     [
8     .B "\-c Nsamp"
9     ][
10     .B "\-n Nproc"
11     ][
12 greg 1.4 .B "\-r 'rtcontrib opts...'"
13     ][
14 greg 1.6 .B "\-t{3|4} Nlog2"
15     ][
16 greg 1.3 .B "{+|-}forward"
17     ][
18     .B "{+|-}backward"
19     ][
20 greg 1.1 .B "{+|-}mgf"
21     ][
22 greg 1.7 .B "{+|-}geom unit"
23 greg 1.1 ][
24     .B "\-dim Xmin Xmax Ymin Ymax Zmin Zmax"
25     ]
26     [
27     .B "geom .."
28     ]
29     .SH DESCRIPTION
30     .I GenBSDF
31 greg 1.3 computes a bidirectional scattering distribution function from
32 greg 1.1 a Radiance or MGF scene description given on the input.
33     The program assumes the input is in Radiance format unless the
34     .I \+mgf
35     option is specified.
36     The output conforms to the LBNL Window 6 XML standard for BSDF data,
37     and will include an MGF representation of the input geometry if the
38     .I \+geom
39 greg 1.7 option is given, followed by one of "meter," "foot," "inch,"
40     "centimeter," or "millimeter," depending on the scene units.
41     The default is to include the provided geometry,
42     which is assumed to be in meters.
43     Geometry output can be supressed with the
44     .I \-geom
45     option, which must also be followed by one of the above length units.
46 greg 1.1 .PP
47 greg 1.3 Normally,
48     .I genBSDF
49     computes components needed by a backwards ray-tracing process,
50     .I \+backward.
51     If both forward and backward (front and back) distributions are needed, the
52     .I \+forward
53     option may be given.
54     To turn off backward components, use the
55     .I \-backward
56     option.
57     Computing both components takes about twice as long as one component.
58     .PP
59 greg 1.1 The geometry must fit a rectangular profile, whose width is along the X-axis,
60     height is in the Y-axis, and depth is in the Z-axis.
61     The positive Z-axis points into the room, and the input geometry should
62     not extend into the room.
63     (I.e., it should not contain any positive Z values, since the putative
64     emitting surface is assumed to lie at Z=0.)\0
65     The entire window system should be modeled, including sills and
66     edge geometry anticipated in the final installation, otherwise
67     accuracy will be impaired.
68     Similarly, materials in the description should be carefully measured.
69     .PP
70     Normally, the input geometry will be positioned according to its actual
71     bounding box, but this may be overridden with the
72     .I \-dim
73     option.
74     Use this in cases where the fenestration system is designed to fit a
75     smaller (or larger) opening or is offset somehow.
76     .PP
77     The variance in the results may be reduced by increasing the number of
78     samples per incident direction using the
79     .I \-c
80     option.
81 greg 1.8 This value defaults to 10000 samples distributed over the incoming plane
82 greg 1.1 for each of the 145 Klems hemisphere directions.
83     .PP
84     In some cases, the processing time may be reduced by the
85     .I \-n
86     option, which specifies the number of simultaneous
87     .I rtrace(1)
88     processes to run in
89     .I rtcontrib(1).
90 greg 1.4 The
91     .I \-r
92     option may be used to specify a set of quoted arguments to be
93     included on the
94     .I rtcontrib
95     command line.
96 greg 1.6 .PP
97     The
98     .I \-t4
99     mode computes a non-uniform BSDF represented as a rank 4 tensor tree,
100     suitable for use in the Radiance rendering tools.
101     The parameter given to this option is the log to the base 2 of the
102     sampling resolution in each dimension, and must be an integer.
103     The
104     .I \-c
105     setting should be adjusted so that an appropriate number of samples
106     lands in each region.
107     A
108     .I \-t4
109     parameter of 5 corresponds to 32x32 or 1024 output regions, so a
110     .I \-c
111     setting of 102400 would provide 100 samples per region on average.
112     Increasing the resolution to 6 corresponds to 64x64 or 4096
113     regions, so the
114     .I \-c
115     setting would need to be increased by a factor of 4 to provide
116     the same accuracy in each region.
117     .PP
118     The
119     .I \-t3
120     mode is similar to
121     .I \-t4
122     but computes a rank 3 tensor tree rather than rank 4.
123     This provides a much faster computation, but only works
124     in special circumstances.
125     Specifically, do NOT use this option if the system is not in fact isotropic.
126     I.e., only use
127     .I \-t3
128     when you are certain that the system has a high degree of radial symmetry.
129     Again, the parameter to this option sets the maximum resolution as
130     a power of 2 in each dimension, but in this case there is one less
131     dimension being sampled.
132 greg 1.1 .SH EXAMPLE
133     To create a BSDF description including geometry from a set of venetian blinds:
134     .IP "" .2i
135 greg 1.2 genblinds blind_white blind1 .07 3 1.5 30 40 | xform -rz -90 -rx 90 > blind1.rad
136 greg 1.1 .br
137 greg 1.4 genBSDF -r @rtc.opt blind_white.mat glazing.rad blind1.rad > blind1.xml
138 greg 1.6 .PP
139     To create a non-uniform, anisotropic BSDF distribution with a maximum
140     resolution of 128x128 from the same description:
141     .IP "" .2i
142     genBSDF -r @rtc.opt -t4 7 -c 160000 blind_white.mat glazing.rad blind1.rad > blind12.xml
143     .SH NOTES
144     The variable resolution (tensor tree) BSDF representation is not supported
145     by all software and applicatons, and should be used with caution.
146     It provides practical, high-resolution data for use in the
147     Radiance rendering programs, but does not work in the matrix formulation
148     of the daylight coefficient method for example.
149     Also, third party tools generally expect or require a fixed number of sample
150     directions using the Klems directions or similar.
151 greg 1.1 .SH AUTHOR
152     Greg Ward
153     .SH "SEE ALSO"
154 greg 1.7 dctimestep(1), genklemsamp(1), genskyvec(1), mkillum(1),
155     pkgBSDF(1), rtcontrib(1), rtrace(1)