9 |
|
][ |
10 |
|
.B "\-n Nproc" |
11 |
|
][ |
12 |
< |
.B "\-r 'rtcontrib opts...'" |
12 |
> |
.B "\-r 'rcontrib opts...'" |
13 |
|
][ |
14 |
+ |
.B "\-t{3|4} Nlog2" |
15 |
+ |
][ |
16 |
|
.B "{+|-}forward" |
17 |
|
][ |
18 |
|
.B "{+|-}backward" |
19 |
|
][ |
20 |
|
.B "{+|-}mgf" |
21 |
|
][ |
22 |
< |
.B "{+|-}geom |
22 |
> |
.B "{+|-}geom unit" |
23 |
|
][ |
24 |
|
.B "\-dim Xmin Xmax Ymin Ymax Zmin Zmax" |
25 |
|
] |
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 |
< |
option is given. |
40 |
< |
(This is the default, and may be switched off using |
41 |
< |
.I \-geom.)\0 |
39 |
> |
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 |
|
.PP |
47 |
|
Normally, |
48 |
|
.I genBSDF |
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. |
57 |
> |
Computing both components takes about twice as long as one component, but |
58 |
> |
is recommended when rays will be impinging from either side. |
59 |
|
.PP |
60 |
|
The geometry must fit a rectangular profile, whose width is along the X-axis, |
61 |
|
height is in the Y-axis, and depth is in the Z-axis. |
79 |
|
samples per incident direction using the |
80 |
|
.I \-c |
81 |
|
option. |
82 |
< |
This value defaults to 1000 samples distributed over the incoming plane |
82 |
> |
This value defaults to 2000 samples distributed over the incoming plane |
83 |
|
for each of the 145 Klems hemisphere directions. |
84 |
|
.PP |
85 |
< |
In some cases, the processing time may be reduced by the |
85 |
> |
On multi-core machines, processing time may be reduced by the |
86 |
|
.I \-n |
87 |
|
option, which specifies the number of simultaneous |
81 |
– |
.I rtrace(1) |
88 |
|
processes to run in |
89 |
< |
.I rtcontrib(1). |
89 |
> |
.I rcontrib(1). |
90 |
|
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 |
94 |
> |
.I rcontrib |
95 |
|
command line. |
96 |
+ |
.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 10240 would provide 10 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 |
|
.SH EXAMPLE |
133 |
|
To create a BSDF description including geometry from a set of venetian blinds: |
134 |
|
.IP "" .2i |
135 |
|
genblinds blind_white blind1 .07 3 1.5 30 40 | xform -rz -90 -rx 90 > blind1.rad |
136 |
|
.br |
137 |
|
genBSDF -r @rtc.opt blind_white.mat glazing.rad blind1.rad > blind1.xml |
138 |
+ |
.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 |
|
.SH AUTHOR |
152 |
|
Greg Ward |
153 |
|
.SH "SEE ALSO" |
154 |
< |
dctimestep(1), genklemsamp(1), genskyvec(1), mkillum(1), rtcontrib(1), rtrace(1) |
154 |
> |
dctimestep(1), genklemsamp(1), genskyvec(1), mkillum(1), |
155 |
> |
pkgBSDF(1), rcontrib(1), rtrace(1) |