- Complete & correct documentations
- Cleanup scene file features
- embed noise file into the code
- add neural representation renderer (with API for NN and Libtorch)
This code contains two versions because the rendering framework was heavily factored and reimplemented
for multiple times. The new version lies in the src
directory with the old version in sources
. The
old version probably should not be used, so it is commented out intentionally. The old version is still
being kept because there are functionalities yet to be ported.
This code also contains experimental programs implemented for testing. Each directory in the experiment
folder contains one standalone program. They are simplied versions of the main renderer, which can be
useful for embeded rendering implementation.
- a compiler
- on Windows, tested with Visual Studio 2017 and 2019 community editions.
- on Linux, tested with Ubuntu 18 and Ubuntu 19 default gcc installs.
- CUDA 11.3 or above
- Download from developer.nvidia.com.
- on Linux, suggest to put
/usr/local/cuda/bin
into yourPATH
.
- latest NVIDIA developer driver that comes with the SDK.
- download from http://developer.nvidia.com/optix and click "Get OptiX".
- OptiX 7 SDK
- download from http://developer.nvidia.com/optix and click "Get OptiX".
- on linux, suggest to set the environment variable
OptiX_INSTALL_DIR
to wherever you installed the SDK.
export OptiX_INSTALL_DIR=<wherever you installed OptiX 7.0 SDK>
- on windows, the installer should automatically put it into the right directory/
- OSPRay & TBB
- if you are building this code in
Release
mode, simply download the latest OSPRay from https://github.com/ospray/ospray/releases and TBB from https://github.com/oneapi-src/oneTBB/releases. - if you are building this code in other configuration, you need to compile and install OSPRay manually. You also do not need to download TBB separately because OSPRay's superbuild will provide a version of TBB.
- if you are building this code in
Detailed steps below:
-
Install required packages
- on Debian/Ubuntu:
sudo apt install libglfw3-dev cmake-curses-gui
- on Debian/Ubuntu:
-
Clone the code
-
Create (and enter) a build directory
mkdir build
cd build
-
Configure with cmake (Debug Mode)
- Ubuntu:
cmake .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug # cmake .. \ # -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug \ # -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=<path-to-libtorch> \ # -Dospray_DIR=<path-to-ospray>\lib\cmake\ospray-x.x.0 \ # -DTBB_DIR=<path-to-tbb>\lib\cmake\tbb
- Windows:
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -T host=x64 -A x64 .. -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug # cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -T host=x64 -A x64 .. ^ # -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ^ # -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=<path-to-libtorch> ^ # -Dospray_DIR=<path-to-ospray>\lib\cmake\ospray-x.x.0 ^ # -DTBB_DIR=<path-to-tbb>\lib\cmake\tbb
-
And build
cmake --build .
- On Linux:
TODO