NAME¶
rvu - generate RADIANCE images interactively
SYNOPSIS¶
rvu [
rpict options ][
-n nproc ][
-o dev ][
-b ][
-pe exposure ] [
$EVAR ] [
@file ]
octree
rvu [ options ] -defaults
rvu -devices
DESCRIPTION¶
Rvu generates RADIANCE images using
octree. (The octree may be
given as the output of a command enclosed in quotes and preceded by a
`!'.) Options specify the viewing parameters as well as giving some
control over the calculation. Options may be given on the command line and/or
read from the environment and/or read from a file. A command argument
beginning with a dollar sign ('$') 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. The options
are the same as for
rpict(1), with a few notable exceptions. The
-r, -z,
-S, -P, -PP and
-t options are not supported, and
-o
specifies which output device is being used instead of the output file. The
-x, -y and
-pa options are unnecessary, since
rvu scales
the display image to the specified output device. Additionally, the
-b
option improves the display on greyscale monitors, and
-pe may be used
to set an initial exposure value.
The
-n option may be used to specify multiple processes, to accelerate
rendering.
In the second form, the default values for the options are printed with a brief
explanation. In the third form, the list of supported output devices is
displayed.
rvu starts rendering the image from the selected viewpoint and gradually
improves the resolution of the display until interrupted by keyboard input.
rvu then issues a prompt (usually ':') and accepts a command line from
the user.
rvu may also stop its calculation and wait for command input
if the resolution of the display has reached the resolution of the graphics
device. At this point, it will give the 'done:' prompt and await further
instructions. If
rvu runs out of memory due to lack of resources to
store its computed image, it will give the 'out of memory:' prompt. At this
prompt, the user can save the image, quit, or even restart a new image,
although this is not generally recommended on virtual memory machines for
efficiency reasons.
rvu is not meant to be a rendering program, and we strongly recommend
that
rpict(1) be used instead for that purpose. Since
rpict(1)
does not store its image in memory or update any display of its output, it is
much faster and less wasteful of its resources than
rvu. rvu is
intended as a quick interactive program for deciding viewpoints and debugging
scene descriptions and is not suited for producing polished images.
COMMANDS¶
Once the program starts, a number of commands can be used to control it. A
command is given by its name, which can be abbreviated, followed by its
arguments.
- aim [ mag [ x y z ] ]
- Zoom in by mag on point x y z . The view
point is held constant; only the view direction and size are changed. If
x y z is missing, the cursor is used to select the view center. A
negative magnification factor means zoom out. The default factor is
one.
- ^C
- Interrupt. Go to the command line.
- exposure [ spec ]
- Adjust exposure. The number spec is a multiplier
used to compensate the average exposure. A value of 1 renormalizes the
image to the computed average, which is usually done immediately after
startup. If spec begins with a '+' or '-', the compensation is
interpreted in f-stops (ie. the power of two). If spec begins with
an '=', an absolute setting is performed. An '=' by itself permits
interactive display and setting of the exposure. If spec begins
with an '@', the exposure is adjusted to present similar visibility to
what would be experienced in the real environment. If spec is
absent, or an '@' is followed by nothing, then the cursor is used to pick
a specific image location for normalization.
- focus [distance]
- Set focus distance for depth-of-field sampling. If a
distance in world coordinates is absent, then the cursor is used to choose
a point in the scene on which to focus. (The focus distance setting does
not affect rendering in rview, but can be used in rpict with
the -pd option to simulate depth-of-field on views saved from
rview.)
- frame [ xmin ymin xmax ymax ]
- Set frame for refinement. If coordinates are absent, the
cursor is used to pick frame boundaries. If ``all'' is specified, the
frame is reset to the entire image.
- free
- Free cached object structures and associated data. This
command may be useful when memory is low and a completely different view
is being generated from the one previous.
- last [ file ]
- Restore the previous view. If a view or picture file
is specified, the parameters are taken from the last view entry in the
file.
- L [ vw [ rfile ] ]
- Load parameters for view vw from the rad(1)
input file, rfile. Both vw and rfile must be given
the first call, but subsequent calls will use the last rfile as a
default, and "1" as the default view (ie. the first view
appearing in rfile). If rvu was started by rad, then
the rfile parameter will initially default to the rad input file
used.
- move [ mag [ x y z ] ]
- Move camera mag times closer to point x y z .
For a perspective projection (or fisheye view), only the view point is
changed; the view direction and size remain constant. The view size must
be modified in a parallel projection since it determines magnification. If
x y z is missing, the cursor is used to select the view center. A
negative magnification factor decreases the object size. The default
factor is one. Care must be taken to avoid moving behind or inside other
objects.
- new [ nproc ]
- Restart the image, using the specified number of rendering
processes. Usually used after the "set" command.
- pivot angle [ elev [ mag [ x y z ] ] ]
- Similar to the "move" command, but pivots the
view about a selected point. The angle is measured in degrees
around the view up vector using the right hand rule. The optional
elev is the elevation in degrees from the pivot point; positive
raises the view point to look downward and negative lowers the view point
to look upward.
- quit
- Quit the program.
- ^R
- Redraw the image. Use when the display gets corrupted. On
some displays, occassionally forcing a redraw can improve appearance, as
more color information is available and the driver can make a better color
table selection.
- rotate angle [ elev [ mag ] ]
- Rotate the camera horizontally by angle degrees. If
an elevation is specified, the camera looks upward elev degrees.
(Negative means look downward.)
- set [ var [ val ] ]
- Check/change program variable. If var is absent, the
list of available variables is displayed. If val is absent, the
current value of the variable is displayed and changed interactively.
Otherwise, the variable var assumes the value val. Variables
include: ambient value (av), ambient value weight (aw), ambient bounces
(ab), ambient accuracy (aa), ambient divisions (ad), ambient radius (ar),
ambient samples (as), black&white (b), back face visibility (bv),
direct jitter (dj), direct sampling (ds), direct threshold (dt), direct
visibility (dv), irradiance (i), limit weight (lw), limit recursion (lr),
medium extinction (me), medium albedo (ma), medium eccentricity (mg),
medium sampling (ms), pixel sample (ps), pixel threshold (pt), specular
jitter (sj), specular threshold (st), and uncorrelated sampling (u). Once
a variable has been changed, the "new" command can be used to
recompute the image with the new parameters. If a program variable is not
available here, it may show up under some other command or it may be
impossible to change once the program is running.
- trace [ xbeg ybeg zbeg xdir ydir zdir ]
- Trace a ray. If the ray origin and direction are absent,
the cursor is used to pick a location in the image to trace. The object
intersected and its material, location and value are displayed.
- view [ file [ comments ] ]
- Check/change view parameters. If file is present,
the view parameters are appended to a file, followed by comments if
any. Alternatively, view options may be given directly on the command line
instead of an output view file. Otherwise, view parameters are displayed
and changed interactively.
- V [ vw [ rfile ] ]
- Append the current view as view vw in the rad file
rfile. Compliment to L command. Note that the view is simply
appended to the file, and previous views with the same name should be
removed before using the file with rad.
- write [ file ]
- Write picture to file. If argument is missing, the
current file name is used.
- ^Z
- Stop the program. The screen will be redrawn when the
program resumes.
ENVIRONMENT¶
RAYPATH the directories to check for auxiliary files. DISPLAY_GAMMA the value
to use for monitor gamma correction.
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward
SEE ALSO¶
getinfo(1),
lookamb(1),
oconv(1),
pfilt(1),
rad(1),
rpict(1),
rtrace(1)