NAME¶
rtcontrib - compute contribution coefficients in a RADIANCE scene
SYNOPSIS¶
rtcontrib [
-n nprocs ][
-V ][
-c count ][
-fo |
-r ][
-e expr ][
-f source ][
-o
ospec ][
-b binv ][
-bn nbins ] {
-m mod | -M file }
[
$EVAR ] [
@file ] [ rtrace options ]
octree
rtcontrib [ options ] -defaults
DESCRIPTION¶
Rtcontrib computes ray coefficients for objects whose modifiers are named
in one or more
-m settings. These modifiers are usually materials
associated with light sources or sky domes, and must directly modify some
geometric primitives to be considered in the output. A modifier list may also
be read from a file using the
-M option. The RAYPATH environment
variable determines directories to search for this file. (No search takes
place if a file name begins with a '.', '/' or '~' character.)
If the
-n option is specified with a value greater than 1, multiple
rtrace processes will be used to accelerate computation on a shared
memory machine. Note that there is no benefit to using more processes than
there are local CPUs available to do the work, and the
rtcontrib
process itself may use a considerable amount of CPU time.
By setting the boolean
-V option, you may instruct
rtcontrib to
report the contribution from each material rather than the ray coefficient.
This is particularly useful for light sources with directional output
distributions, whose value would otherwise be lost in the shuffle. With the
default
-V- setting, the output of rtcontrib is a coefficient that must
be multiplied by the radiance of each material to arrive at a final
contribution. This is more convenient for computing daylight coefficeints, or
cases where the actual radiance is not desired. Use the
-V+ setting
when you wish to simply sum together contributions (with possible adjustment
factors) to obtain a final radiance value. Combined with the
-i or
-I option, irradiance contributions are reported by
-V+ rather
than radiance, and
-V- coefficients contain an additonal factor of PI.
The
-c option tells
rtcontrib how many rays to accumulate for each
record. The default value is 1, meaning a full record will be produced for
each input ray. For values greater than 1, contributions will be averaged
together over the given number of input rays. If set to zero, only a single
record will be produced at the very end, corresponding to the sum of all rays
given on the input (rather than the average). This is equivalent to passing
all the output records through a program like
total(1) to sum RGB
values together, but is much more efficient. Using this option, it is possible
to reverse sampling, sending rays from a parallel source such as the sun to a
diffuse surface, for example. Note that output flushing via zero-direction
rays is disabled for accumulated evaluations.
The output of
rtcontrib has many potential uses. Source contributions can
be used as components in linear combination to reproduce any desired
variation, e.g., simulating lighting controls or changing sky conditions via
daylight coefficients. More generally,
rtcontrib can be used to compute
arbitrary input-output relationships in optical systems, such as luminaires,
light pipes, and shading devices.
Rtcontrib calls
rtrace(1) with the -oTW (or -oTV) option to
calculate the daughter ray contributions for each input ray, and the output
tallies are sent to one or more destinations according to the given
-o
specification. If a destination begins with an exclamation mark ('!'), then a
pipe is opened to a command and data is sent to its standard input. Otherwise,
the destination is treated as a file. An existing file of the same name will
not be clobbered, unless the
-fo option is given. If instead the
-r option is specified, data recovery is attempted on existing files.
(If
-c 0 is used together with the
-r option, existing files are
read in and new ray evaluations are added to the previous results, providing a
convenient means for progressive simulation.) If an output
specification contains a "%s" format, this will be replaced by the
modifier name. The
-b option may be used to further define a "bin
number" within each object if finer resolution is needed, and this will
be applied to a "%d" format in the output file specification if
present. The actual bin number is computed at run time based on ray direction
and surface intersection, as described below. If the number of bins is known
in advance, it should be specified with the
-bn option, and this is
critical for output files containing multiple values per record. A variable or
constant name may be given for this parameter if it has been defined via a
previous
-f or
-e option. Since bin numbers start from 0, the
bin count is always equal to the last bin plus 1. Set the this value to 0 if
the bin count is unknown (the default). The most recent
-b, -bn
and
-o options to the left of each
-m setting are the ones used
for that modifier. The ordering of other options is unimportant, except for
-x and
-y if the
-c is 0, when they control the
resolution string produced in the corresponding output.
If a
-b expression is defined for a particular modifier, the bin number
will be evaluated at run time for each ray contribution from
rtrace.
Specifically, each ray's world intersection point will be assigned to the
variables Px, Py, and Pz, and the normalized ray direction will be assigned to
Dx, Dy, and Dz. These parameters may be combined with definitions given in
-e arguments and files read using the
-f option. The computed
bin value will be rounded to the nearest whole number. This mechanism allows
the user to define precise regions or directions they wish to accumulate, such
as the Tregenza sky discretization, which would be otherwise impossible to
specify as a set of RADIANCE primitives. The rules and predefined functions
available for these expressions are described in the
rcalc(1) man page.
Unlike
rcalc, rtcontrib will search the RADIANCE library
directories for each file given in a
-f option.
If no
-o specification is given, results are written on the standard
output in order of modifier (as given on the command line) then bin number.
Concatenated data is also sent to a single destination (i.e., an initial
-o specification without formatting strings). If a "%s"
format appears but no "%d" in the
-o specification, then each
modifier will have its own output file, with multiple values per record in the
case of a non-zero
-b definition. If a "%d" format appears
but no "%s", then each bin will get its own output file, with
modifiers output in order in each record. For text output, each RGB
coefficient triple is separated by a tab, with a newline at the end of each
ray record. For binary output formats, there is no such delimiter to mark the
end of each record.
Input and output format defaults to plain text, where each ray's origin and
direction (6 real values) are given on input, and one line is produced per
output file per ray. Alternative data representations may be specified by the
-f[io] option, which is described in the
rtrace man page along
with the associated
-x and
-y resolution settings. In
particular, the color ('c') output data representation together with positive
dimensions for
-x and
-y will produce an uncompressed RADIANCE
picture, suitable for manipulation with
pcomb(1) and related tools.
Options may be given on the command line and/or read from the environment and/or
read from a file. A command argument beginning with a dollar sign ('$') is
immediately replaced by the contents of the given environment variable. A
command argument beginning with an at sign ('@') is immediately replaced by
the contents of the given file.
EXAMPLES¶
To compute the proportional contributions from sources modified by
"light1" vs. "light2" on a set of illuminance values:
-
- rtcontrib -I+ @render.opt -o c_%s.dat -m light1 -m light2
scene.oct < test.dat
To generate a pair of images corresponding to these two lights' contributions:
-
- vwrays -ff -x 1024 -y 1024 -vf best.vf | rtcontrib -ffc
`vwrays -d -x 1024 -y 1024 -vf best.vf` @render.opt -o c_%s.hdr -m light1
-m light2 scene.oct
These images may then be recombined using the desired outputs of light1 and
light2:
-
- pcomb -c 100 90 75 c_light1.hdr -c 50 55 57 c_light2.hdr
> combined.hdr
To compute an array of illuminance contributions according to a Tregenza sky:
-
- rtcontrib -I+ -b tbin -o sky.dat -m skyglow -b 0 -o
ground.dat -m groundglow @render.opt -f tregenza.cal scene.oct <
test.dat
ENVIRONMENT¶
RAYPATH path to search for -f and -M files
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO¶
cnt(1),
genklemsamp(1),
getinfo(1),
pcomb(1),
pfilt(1),
ra_rgbe(1),
rcalc(1),
rpict(1),
rsensor(1),
rtrace(1),
total(1),
vwrays(1),
ximage(1)