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Revision: 1.3
Committed: Tue Sep 4 17:36:40 2007 UTC (16 years, 8 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.2: +15 -15 lines
Log Message:
Added backslashes in front of hyphens (thanks to Bernd Zeimetz for his effort)

File Contents

# User Rev Content
1 greg 1.3 .\" RCSid "$Id: ies2rad.1,v 1.2 2003/12/09 15:59:06 greg Exp $"
2 greg 1.1 .TH IES2RAD 1 6/14/96 RADIANCE
3     .SH NAME
4     ies2rad - convert IES luminaire data to RADIANCE description
5     .SH SYNOPSIS
6     .B ies2rad
7     [
8     .B options
9     ]
10     [
11     .B input ..
12     ]
13     .SH DESCRIPTION
14     .I Ies2rad
15     converts one or more IES luminaire data files to the equivalent RADIANCE
16     scene description.
17     The light source geometry will always be centered at the origin aimed
18     in the negative z direction, with the 0 degree plane along the x axis.
19     Usually, two output files will be created for every input file, one
20     scene file (with a ".rad" suffix) and one data file (with a ".dat"
21     suffix).
22     If the IES input file includes tilt data, then another data file
23     will be created (with a "+.dat" suffix).
24     If the
25     .I \-s
26     option is used, the scene data will be sent to the standard output
27     instead of being written to a file.
28     Since the data file does not change with other options to
29     .I ies2rad,
30     this is a convenient way to specify different lamp colors and
31     multipliers inline in a scene description.
32     If the
33     .I \-g
34     option is used, then an octree file will be created (with the ".oct"
35     suffix).
36     The root portion of the output file names will be the same as the
37     corresponding input file, unless the
38     .I \-o
39     option is used.
40     The output files will be created in the current directory (no matter
41     which directory the input files came from) unless the
42     .I \-l
43     or
44     .I \-p
45     options are used.
46     .PP
47     .I Ies2rad
48     assigns light source colors based on information in a lamp lookup table.
49     Since most lamps are distinctly colored,
50     it is often desirable to override this lookup procedure and use
51     a neutral value that will produced color-balanced renderings.
52     In general, it is important to consider lamp color when an odd assortment
53     of fixture types is being used to illuminate the same scene, and
54     the rendering can always be balanced by pfilt(1) to a specific white value
55     later.
56     .TP 10n
57     .BI -l \ libdir
58     Set the library directory path to
59     .I libdir.
60     This is where all relative pathnames will begin for output file names.
61     For light sources that will be used by many people, this should be
62     set to some central location included in the RAYPATH environment variable.
63     The default is the current working directory.
64     .TP
65     .BI -p \ prefdir
66     Set the library subdirectory path to
67     .I prefdir.
68     This is the subdirectory from the library where all output files will
69     be placed.
70     It is often most convenient to use a subdirectory for the storage of
71     light sources, since there tend to be many files and placing them all
72     in one directory is very messy.
73     The default value is the empty string.
74     .TP
75     .BI -o \ outname
76     Set the output file name root to
77     .I outname.
78     This overrides the default output file name root which is the same as the
79     input file.
80     This option may be used for only one input file, and is required when
81     reading data from the standard input.
82     .TP
83     .BR -s
84     Send the scene information to the standard output rather than a
85     separate file.
86     This is appropriate when calling
87     .I ies2rad
88     from within a scene description via an inline command.
89     The data file(s) will still be written based on the output file name
90     root, but since this information is unaffected by command line options,
91     it is safe to have multiple invocations of
92     .I ies2rad
93     using the same input file and different output options.
94     The
95     .I \-s
96     option may be used for only one input file.
97     .TP
98     .BI -d units
99     Output dimensions are in
100     .I units,
101     which is one of the letters 'm', 'c', 'f', or 'i' for meters,
102     centimeters, feet or inches, respectively.
103     The letter specification may be followed by a slash ('/') and an
104     optional divisor.
105     For example,
106     .I \-dm/1000
107     would be millimeters.
108     The default output is in meters, regardless of the original units in
109     the IES input file.
110     Note that there is no space in this option.
111     .TP
112     .BI -i \ rad
113     Ignore the crude geometry given by the IES input file and use instead an illum
114     sphere with radius
115     .I rad.
116     This option may be useful when the user wishes to add a more accurate
117     geometric description to the light source model, though this need
118     is obviated by the recent LM-63-1995 specification, which uses MGF
119     detail geometry.
120     (See
121     .I \-g
122     option below.)\0
123     .TP
124     .BR -g
125     If the IES file contains MGF detail geometry, compile this geometry into
126     a separate octree and create a single instance referencing it
127     instead of including the converted geometry directly in the Radiance
128     output file.
129     This can result in a considerable memory savings for luminaires
130     which are later duplicated many times in a scene, though the
131     appearance may suffer for certain luminaires since the enclosed glow
132     sources will not light the local geometry as they would otherwise.
133     .TP
134     .BI -f \ lampdat
135     Use
136     .I lampdat
137     instead of the default lamp lookup table (lamp.tab) to map lamp
138     names to xy chromaticity and lumen depreciation data.
139     It is often helpful to have customized lookup tables for specific
140     manufacturers and applications.
141     .TP
142     .BI -t \ lamp
143     Use the given lamp type for all input files.
144     Normally,
145     .I ies2rad
146     looks at the header lines of the IES file to try and determine
147     what lamp is being used in the fixture.
148     If any of the lines is matched by a pattern in the lamp lookup
149 greg 1.3 table (see the \-f option above), that color and depreciation factor will
150     be used instead of the default (see the \-c and \-u options).
151 greg 1.1 The
152     .I lamp
153     specification is also looked up in the lamp table unless it is
154     set to "default", in which case the default color is used instead.
155     .TP
156 greg 1.3 .BI \-c " red grn blu"
157 greg 1.1 Use the given color if the type of the lamp is unknown or
158 greg 1.3 the \-t option is set to "default".
159 greg 1.1 If unspecified, the default color will be white.
160     .TP
161 greg 1.3 .BI \-u \ lamp
162 greg 1.1 Set the default lamp color according to the entry for
163     .I lamp
164 greg 1.3 in the lookup table (see the \-f option).
165 greg 1.1 This is the color that will be used if the input specification
166     does not match any lamp type patterns.
167 greg 1.3 This option is used instead of the \-c option.
168 greg 1.1 .TP
169 greg 1.3 .BI \-m \ factor
170 greg 1.1 Multiply all output quantities by
171     .I factor.
172     This is the best way to scale fixture brightness for different lamps, but care
173     should be taken when this option is applied to multiple files.
174     .SH EXAMPLE
175     To convert a single IES data file in inches with color balanced output
176     and 15% lumen depreciation,
177     creating the files "fluor01.rad" and "fluor01.dat" in the current directory:
178     .IP "" .2i
179 greg 1.3 ies2rad \-di \-t default \-m .85 fluor01.ies
180 greg 1.1 .PP
181     To convert three IES files of various types to tenths of a foot and put
182     them in the library "/usr/local/lib/ray" subdirectory "source/ies":
183     .IP "" .2i
184 greg 1.3 ies2rad \-df/10 \-l /usr/local/lib/ray \-p source/ies ies01 ies02 ies03
185 greg 1.1 .PP
186     To convert a single file and give the output a different name:
187     .IP "" .2i
188 greg 1.3 ies2rad \-o fluorescent ies03
189 greg 1.1 .SH ENVIRONMENT
190     RAYPATH directories to search for lamp lookup table
191     .SH AUTHOR
192     Greg Ward
193     .SH BUGS
194 greg 1.3 In pre\-1991 standard IES files, all header lines will be examined
195 greg 1.1 for a lamp table string match.
196 greg 1.3 In post\-1991 standard files, only those lamps with the [LAMP] or
197 greg 1.1 [LAMPCAT] keywords will be searched.
198     The first match found in the file is always the one used.
199     This method of assigning colors to fixtures is less than perfect,
200     and the IES would do well to include explicit spectral information
201     somehow in their specification.
202     .PP
203 greg 1.3 The IESNA LM\-63 specification prior to 1995 provided three basic source
204 greg 1.1 shapes, rectangular, round, and elliptical.
205     The details of these shapes is vague at best.
206     Rectangular sources will always be rectangular, but ies2rad will
207     approximate round sources as spherical if the height is close to
208     or greater than the width and length, and as a ring otherwise.
209     Elliptical sources are treated the same as round sources.
210     The 1995 standard rectifies this problem by including detailed
211     luminaire geometry as MGF data, though nothing in the standard
212     requires manufacturers to provide this information.
213     .SH "SEE ALSO"
214     mgf2rad(1), oconv(1), pfilt(1), rad2mgf(1), rpict(1), xform(1)