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Revision: 1.3
Committed: Tue Jan 18 03:59:40 2005 UTC (19 years, 4 months ago) by greg
Branch: MAIN
Changes since 1.2: +22 -7 lines
Log Message:
Created pmdblur script and added DBLUR variable to ranimate

File Contents

# Content
1 .\" RCSid "$Id: ranimate.1,v 1.2 2003/12/09 15:59:06 greg Exp $"
2 .TH RANIMATE 1 6/24/98 RADIANCE
3 .SH NAME
4 ranimate - compute a RADIANCE animation
5 .SH SYNOPSIS
6 .B ranimate
7 [
8 .B \-s
9 ][
10 .B \-n
11 ][
12 .B \-e
13 ][
14 .B \-w
15 ]
16 .B ranfile
17 .SH DESCRIPTION
18 .I Ranimate
19 is an executive program that reads the given
20 .I ranfile
21 and makes appropriate calls to
22 .I rad(1),
23 .I rpict(1),
24 .I pinterp(1),
25 and/or
26 .I pfilt(1)
27 to render an animation.
28 Variables in
29 .I ranfile
30 indicate input files, process servers (execution hosts), output
31 directories and file names, and various other controls and options.
32 .PP
33 Normally, commands are echoed to the standard output as they are
34 executed.
35 The
36 .I \-s
37 option tells
38 .I ranimate
39 to do its work silently.
40 The
41 .I \-n
42 option tells
43 .I ranimate
44 not to take any action (ie. not to actually execute any commands).
45 The
46 .I \-e
47 option tells
48 .I ranimate
49 to explicate all variables used for the animation, including
50 default values not specified in the input file, and print them on
51 the standard output.
52 .PP
53 The
54 .I \-w
55 option turns off warnings about multiply and misassigned variables.
56 .PP
57 Normally,
58 .I ranimate
59 will produce one animation frame for each view given in the specified
60 view file.
61 If an animation has ended or been killed in an incomplete state, however,
62 .I ranimate
63 will attempt to pick up where the earlier process left off.
64 If the process is still running, or was started on another machine,
65 .I ranimate
66 will report this information and exit.
67 .PP
68 Animation variable assignments appear one per line in
69 .I ranfile.
70 The name of the variable is followed by an equals sign
71 ('=') and its value(s).
72 The end of line may be escaped with a backslash ('\\'), though it is
73 not usually necessary since additional variable values may be given
74 in multiple assignments.
75 Variables that should have only one value are given in upper case.
76 Variables that may have multiple values are given in lower case.
77 Variables may be abbreviated by their first three letters, except
78 for "host", which must have all four.
79 Comments in
80 .I ranfile
81 start with a pound sign ('#') and proceed to the end of line.
82 .PP
83 The animation variables, their interpretations and default values
84 are given below.
85 .TP 10n
86 .BR DIRECTORY
87 The name of the animation directory.
88 All temporary files generated during the animation will be placed in
89 this directory, which will be created by
90 .I ranimate
91 if it does not exist.
92 A file named "STATUS" will also be created there, and will contain current
93 information about the animation process.
94 This variable has no default value, and its setting is required.
95 .TP
96 .BR OCTREE
97 The name of the octree file for a static scene walk-through
98 animation.
99 There is no default value for this variable, and any
100 setting will be ignored if the
101 .I ANIMATE
102 variable is also set (see below).
103 .TP
104 .BR ANIMATE
105 The scene generation command for a dynamic animation.
106 This command, if given, will be executed with the frame number as the
107 final argument, and on its standard output it must produce
108 the complete octree for that frame.
109 Care must be taken that this command does not create any temporary files
110 that might collide with same-named files created by other
111 animation commands running in parallel.
112 Also, the command should produce no output to the standard error, unless
113 there is a fatal condition.
114 (I.e., switch all warnings off;
115 see the BUGS section, below.)\0
116 There is no default animation command, and either this variable or the
117 .I OCTREE
118 variable must be set.
119 .TP
120 .BR VIEWFILE
121 This variable names a file from which
122 .I ranimate
123 may extract the view for each frame in the animation.
124 This file should contain one valid view per frame, starting with
125 frame 1 on line 1, regardless of the setting of the
126 .I START
127 variable.
128 An exception is made for a view file with only a single view, which
129 is used for every frame of a dynamic scene animation.
130 This variable is required, and there is no default value.
131 .TP
132 .BR START
133 The initial frame number in this animation sequence.
134 The minimum value is 1, and if a later starting frame is given,
135 .I ranimate
136 assumes that the earlier frames are included in some other
137 .I ranfile,
138 which has been previously executed.
139 (See the
140 .I NEXTANIM
141 variable, below.)\0
142 The default value is 1.
143 .TP
144 .BR END
145 The final frame number in this sequence.
146 The minimum value is equal to the
147 .I START
148 frame,
149 and the default value is computed from the number of views in the
150 given
151 .I VIEWFILE.
152 .TP
153 .BR EXPOSURE
154 This variable tells
155 .I ranimate
156 how to adjust the exposure for each frame.
157 As in
158 .I pfilt,
159 the exposure setting may be given either as a multiplier or as a
160 number of f-stop adjustments (eg. +2 or -1.5).
161 Alternatively, a file name may be given, which
162 .I ranimate
163 will interpret as having one exposure value per line per frame,
164 beginning with frame 1 at line 1.
165 (See also the
166 .I VIEWFILE
167 variable, above.)\0
168 There is no default value for this variable.
169 If it is not given, an average level will be computed by
170 .I pfilt
171 for each frame.
172 .TP
173 .BR BASENAME
174 The base output file name for the final frames.
175 This string will be passed to the
176 .I \-o
177 and
178 .I \-z
179 options of rpict, along with appropriate suffixes,
180 and thus should contain a
181 .I printf(3)
182 style integer field to distinguish one frame number from another.
183 The final frames will use this name with a ".pic" suffix.
184 The default value is the assigned
185 .I DIRECTORY
186 followed by "/frame%03d".
187 .TP
188 .BR host
189 A host to use for command execution.
190 This variable may be assigned a host name, followed by an optional
191 number of parallel processes, followed by an optional
192 directory (relative to the user's home directory on that machine),
193 followed by an alternate user name.
194 Multiple
195 .I host
196 assignments may appear.
197 It is not advisable to specify more than one process on a single-CPU
198 host, as this just tends to slow things down.
199 The default value is "localhost", which starts a single process in
200 the current directory of the local machine.
201 .TP
202 .BR RIF
203 This variable specifies a
204 .I rad
205 input file to use as a source of rendering options and other
206 variable settings.
207 If given,
208 .I ranimate
209 will execute
210 .I rad
211 and create an options file to later pass to
212 .I rpict
213 or
214 .I rtrace.
215 Besides prepending the
216 .I render
217 variable,
218 .I ranimate
219 will also extract default settings for the common variables:
220 .I OCTREE,
221 .I RESOLUTION,
222 .I EXPOSURE
223 and
224 .I pfilt.
225 Following the file name, overriding variable settings may be given,
226 which will be passed to
227 .I rad
228 on the command line.
229 Settings with spaces in them should be enclosed in quotes.
230 The execution of
231 .I rad
232 will also update the contents of the octree, if necessary.
233 There is no default value for this variable.
234 .TP
235 .BR DISKSPACE
236 Specify the amount of disk space (in megabytes) available on the
237 destination file system for temporary file storage.
238 .I Ranimate
239 will coordinate its batch operations based on this amount of storage,
240 assuming that there is either enough additional space for all the
241 final frames, or that the given
242 .I TRANSFER
243 command will move the finished frames to some other location (see
244 below).
245 The default value is 100 megabytes.
246 .TP
247 .BR ARCHIVE
248 After each batch rendering is finished and checked for completeness,
249 .I ranimate
250 will execute the given command, passing the names of all the
251 original pictures and z-buffer files generated by
252 .I rpict.
253 (The command is executed in the destination directory, and file names
254 will be simple.)\0
255 Normally, the archive command copies the original files to a tape device
256 or somewhere that they can be retrieved in the event of failure in
257 the frame interpolation stages.
258 After the archive command has successfully completed, the original
259 renderings are removed.
260 There is no default value for this variable, meaning that the
261 original unfiltered frames will simply be removed.
262 Note that the last one or two rendered frames may not be copied, archived
263 or removed in case there is a another sequence picking up where this
264 one left off.
265 .TP
266 .BR TRANSFER
267 The command to transfer the completed animation frames.
268 The shell changes to the destination directory and appends
269 the names of all the finished frames to this command
270 before it is executed.
271 Normally, the transfer command does something such as convert the
272 frames to another format and/or copy them to tape or some other
273 destination device before removing them.
274 If this variable is not given, the final frames are left where they
275 are.
276 (See
277 .I BASENAME,
278 above.)\0
279 .TP
280 .BR RSH
281 The command to use instead of
282 .I rsh(1)
283 to execute commands remotely on another machine.
284 The arguments and behavior of this program must be identical to the UNIX
285 .I rsh
286 command, except that the
287 .I -l
288 option will always be used to specify an alternate user name rather than the
289 .I "user@host"
290 convention.
291 Th
292 .I -l
293 option may or may not appear, but the
294 .I -n
295 option will always be used, and the expected starting directory will
296 be that of the remote user, just as with
297 .I rsh.
298 .TP
299 .BR NEXTANIM
300 This variable specifies the next
301 .I ranfile
302 to use after this sequence is completed.
303 This offers a convenient means to continue an animation that
304 requires different control options in different segments.
305 It is important in this case to correctly set the
306 .I START
307 and
308 .I END
309 variables in each
310 .I ranfile
311 so that the segments do not overlap frames.
312 .TP
313 .BR OVERSAMPLE
314 This variable sets the multiplier of the original image size
315 relative to the final size given by the
316 .I RESOLUTION
317 variable.
318 This determines the quality of anti-aliasing in the final frames.
319 A value of 1 means no anti-aliasing, and a value of 3 produces very
320 good anti-aliasing.
321 The default value is 2.
322 (A fractional value may be used for previews, causing low
323 resolution frames with large, blocky pixels to be produced.)\0
324 .TP
325 .BR INTERPOLATE
326 This variable sets the number of frames to interpolate between each
327 rendered frame in a static scene walk-through.
328 Z-buffers for each rendered frame will be generated by
329 .I rpict,
330 and
331 .I pinterp
332 will be called to perform the actual "tweening."
333 This results in a potentially large savings in rendering time, but
334 should be used with caution since certain information may be lost or
335 inaccurate, such as specular highlights and reflections, and objects
336 may even break apart if too few renderings are used to interpolate
337 too much motion.
338 The default value for this variable is 0, meaning no interpolation.
339 Interpolation is also switched off if the
340 .I ANIMATE
341 variable is specified.
342 .TP
343 .BR MBLUR
344 This variable specifies the fraction of a frame time that the shutter
345 is simulated as being open for motion blur.
346 A number of samples may be given as a second argument, which
347 controls the number of additional frames computed and averaged
348 together by
349 .I pinterp.
350 If this number is less than 2, then bluring is performed by
351 .I rpict
352 only, resulting in greater noise than the combination of
353 .I rpict
354 and
355 .I pinterp
356 used otherwise.
357 (The default value for number of samples is 5.)\0
358 The default fraction is 0, meaning no motion blurring.
359 This option does not currently work with the
360 .I ANIMATE
361 variable, since pinterp only works for static environments.
362 .TP
363 .BR DBLUR
364 This variable specifies the aperture diameter for depth-of-field blurring,
365 in world units.
366 A number of samples may be given as a second argument, which controls the
367 number of additional frames computed and averaged together by
368 .I pinterp.
369 If this number is less than 2, then blurring is performed by
370 .I rpict
371 only, resulting in greater noise than the combination of
372 .I rpict
373 and
374 .I pinterp
375 used otherwise.
376 (The default value for number of samples is 5.)\0
377 The default aperture is 0, meaning no depth-of-field blurring.
378 This option does not currently work with the
379 .I ANIMATE
380 variable, since pinterp only works for static environments.
381 .TP
382 .BR RTRACE
383 This boolean variable tells
384 .I ranimate
385 whether or not to employ
386 .I rtrace
387 during frame interpolation using the
388 .I \-fr
389 option to
390 .I pinterp.
391 If set to True, then the same rendering options and static octree
392 are passed to
393 .I rtrace
394 as are normally used by
395 .I rpict.
396 The default value is False.
397 Note that this variable only applies to static environment
398 walk-throughs (i.e., no
399 .I ANIMATE
400 command).
401 .TP
402 .BR RESOLUTION
403 This variable specifies the desired final picture resolution.
404 If only a single number is given, this value will be used for both
405 the horizontal and vertical picture dimensions.
406 If two numbers are given, the first is the horizontal resolution and
407 the second is the vertical resolution.
408 If three numbers are given, the third is taken as the pixel aspect
409 ratio for the final picture (a real value).
410 If the pixel aspect ratio is zero, the exact dimensions given will
411 be those produced.
412 Otherwise, they will be used as a frame in which the final image
413 must fit.
414 The default value for this variable is 640.
415 .TP
416 .BR render
417 This variable may be used to specify additional options to
418 .I rpict
419 or
420 .I rtrace.
421 These options will appear after the options set automatically by
422 .I rad,
423 and thus will override the default values.
424 .TP
425 .BR pinterp
426 This variable may be used to specify additional options to
427 .I pinterp,
428 which is used to interpolate frames for a static scene walk-through.
429 (See the
430 .I pinterp
431 man page, and the
432 .I INTERPOLATE
433 variable.)\0
434 Do not use this variable to set the
435 .I pinterp
436 .I \-fr
437 option, but use the
438 .I RTRACE
439 setting instead.
440 .TP
441 .BR pfilt
442 This variable may be used to specify additional options to
443 .I pfilt.
444 If this variable is given in the
445 .I ranfile,
446 then
447 .I pfilt
448 will always be used.
449 (Normally,
450 .I pfilt
451 is called only if
452 .I pinterp
453 is not needed or automatic exposure is required.)\0
454 See the
455 .I pfilt
456 manual page for details.
457 .SH EXAMPLES
458 A minimal input file for
459 .I ranimate
460 might look like this:
461 .IP "" .3i
462 .nf
463 ::::::::::
464 sample.ran
465 ::::::::::
466 # The rad input file for our static scene:
467 RIF= tutor.rif
468 # The spool directory:
469 DIRECTORY= anim1
470 # The view file containing one view per frame:
471 VIEWFILE= anim1.vf
472 # The amount of temporary disk space available:
473 DISKSPACE= 50 # megabytes
474 .fi
475 .PP
476 Note that most of the variables are not set in this file.
477 If we only want to see what default values
478 .I ranimate
479 would use without actually executing anything, we can invoke it
480 thus:
481 .IP "" .2i
482 ranimate -n -e sample.ran
483 .PP
484 This will print the variables we have given as well as default
485 values
486 .I ranimate
487 has assigned for us.
488 Also, we will see the list of commands that
489 .I ranimate
490 would have executed had the
491 .I \-n
492 option not been present.
493 .PP
494 Usually, we execute
495 .I ranimate
496 in the background, redirecting the standard output and standard
497 error to a file:
498 .IP "" .2i
499 ranimate sample.ran >& sample.err &
500 .PP
501 If we decide that the default values
502 .I ranimate
503 has chosen for our variables are not all appropriate, we can add
504 some more assignments to the file:
505 .IP "" .3i
506 .nf
507 host= rays 3 ~greg/obj/tutor ray # execute as ray on multi-host "rays"
508 host= thishost # execute one copy on this host also
509 INTERP= 3 # render every fourth frame
510 RES= 1024 # shoot for 1024x resolution
511 MBLUR= .25 # apply camera motion blur
512 EXP= anim1.exp # adjust exposure according to file
513 pfilt= -r .9 # use Gaussian filtering
514 ARCHIVE= tar cf /dev/nrtape # save original renderings to tape
515 .fi
516 .PP
517 Note the use of abbreviation for variable names.
518 .SH FILES
519 $(DIRECTORY)/STATUS animation status file
520 $(DIRECTORY)/* other temporary files
521 $(BASENAME).pic final animation frames
522 .SH AUTHOR
523 Greg Ward
524 .SH BUGS
525 Due to the difficulty of controlling processes on multiple execution
526 hosts, the
527 .I \-n
528 option of
529 .I ranimate
530 is not useful in the same way as
531 .I rad
532 for generating a script of executable commands to render the
533 sequence.
534 It may give an idea of the sequence of events, but certain temporary
535 files and so forth will not be in the correct state if the user
536 attempts to create a separate batch script.
537 .PP
538 If multiple processors are available on a given host and the
539 .I RTRACE
540 variable is set to True, then the
541 .I \-PP
542 option of
543 .I rtrace
544 should be employed, but it is not.
545 There is no easy way around this problem, but it has only minor
546 consequences in most cases.
547 (The
548 .I \-PP
549 option is used for
550 .I rpict,
551 however.)\0
552 .I
553 .PP
554 The current implementation of the remote shell does not return the
555 exit status of the remote process, which makes it difficult to
556 determine for sure if there has been a serious error or not.
557 Because of this,
558 .I ranimate
559 normally turns off warnings on all rendering processes, and takes
560 any output to standard error from a remote command as a sign that a
561 fatal error has occurred.
562 (This also precludes the use of the
563 .I \-t
564 option to report rendering progress.)\0
565 If the error was caused by a process server going down, the server
566 is removed from the active list and frame recovery takes place.
567 Otherwise,
568 .I ranimate
569 quits at that point in the animation.
570 .PP
571 The current execution environment, in particular the RAYPATH variable,
572 will not be passed during remote command execution, so it is necessary
573 to set whatever variables are important in the remote startup script
574 (e.g., ".cshrc" for the C-shell).
575 This requirement may be circumvented by substituting the
576 .I on(1)
577 command for
578 .I rsh(1)
579 using the
580 .I RSH
581 control variable, or by writing a custom remote execution script.
582 .PP
583 If a different remote user name is used,
584 .I ranimate
585 first attempts to change to the original user's directory with a
586 command of the form
587 .I "cd \~uname".
588 This works under
589 .I csh(1),
590 but may fail under other shells such as
591 .I sh(1).
592 .PP
593 If multiple hosts with different floating point formats are used,
594 .I pinterp
595 will fail because the Z-buffer files will be inconsistent.
596 (Recall that
597 .I pinterp
598 is called if INTERPOLATE > 0 and/or MBLUR is assigned.)\0
599 Since most modern machines use IEEE floating point, this is not
600 usually a problem, but it is something to keep in mind.
601 .SH "SEE ALSO"
602 pfilt(1), pinterp(1), pmblur(1), rad(1),
603 ranimove(1), rpict(1), rsh(1), rtrace(1)