NAME¶
vwrays - compute rays for a given picture or view
SYNOPSIS¶
vwrays [ -i -u -f{a|f|d} | -d ] {
view opts .. |
picture [zbuf] }
DESCRIPTION¶
Vwrays takes a picture or view specification and computes the ray origin
and direction corresponding to each pixel in the image. This information may
then be passed to
rtrace(1) to perform other calculations. If a given
pixel has no corresponding ray (because it is outside the legal view
boundaries), then six zero values are sent instead.
The
-i option may be used to specify desired pixel positions on the
standard input rather than generating all the pixels for a given view. If the
-u option is also given, output will be unbuffered.
The
-f option may be used to set the record format to something other
than the default ASCII. Using raw float or double records for example can
reduce the time requirements of transferring and interpreting information in
rtrace.
View options may be any combination of standard view parameters described in the
rpict(1) manual page, including input from a view file with the
-vf option. Additionally, the target X and Y dimensions may be
specified with
-x and
-y options, and the pixel aspect ratio may
be given with
-pa. The default dimensions are 512x512, with a pixel
aspect ratio of 1.0. Just as in
rpict, the X or the Y dimension will be
reduced if necessary to best match the specified pixel aspect ratio, unless
this ratio is set to zero. The
-pj option may be used to jitter
samples. The default value of 0 turns off ray jittering.
If the
-d option is given, then
vwrays just prints the computed
image dimensions, which are based on the view aspect and the pixel aspect
ratio just described. The
-ld switch will also be printed, with
-ld+ if the view file has an aft clipping plane, and
-ld-
otherwise. This is useful for passing options to the
rtrace command
line. (See below.)
If the view contains an aft clipping plane
(-va option), then the
magnitudes of the ray directions will equal the maximum distance for each
pixel, which will be interpreted correctly by
rtrace with the
-ld+ option. Note that this option should not be given unless there is
an aft clipping plane, since the ray direction vectors will be normalized
otherwise, which would produce a uniform clipping distance of 1.
If a picture is given on the command line rather than a set of view options,
then the view and image dimensions are taken from the picture file, and the
reported ray origins and directions will match the center of each pixel in the
picture (plus optional jitter).
If a depth buffer file is given as well, then
vwrays computes the
intersection point of each pixel ray (equal to the ray origin plus the depth
times the ray direction), and reports this instead of the ray origin. The
reported ray direction will also be reversed. The interpretation of this data
is an image of origins and directions for light rays leaving the scene
surfaces to strike each pixel.
EXAMPLES¶
To compute the ray intersection points and returned directions corresponding to
a picture and its depth buffer:
-
- vwrays scene_v2.hdr scene_v2.zbf > scene_v2.pts
To determine what the dimensions of a given view would be:
-
- vwrays -d -vf myview.vf -x 2048 -y 2048
To generate a RADIANCE picture using
rtrace instead of
rpict:
-
- vwrays -ff -vf view1.vf -x 1024 -y 1024 | rtrace `vwrays -d
-vf view1.vf -x 1024 -y 1024` -ffc scene.oct > view1.hdr
AUTHOR¶
Greg Ward Larson
ACKNOWLEDGMENT¶
This work was supported by Silicon Graphics, Inc.
BUGS¶
Although
vwrays can reproduce any pixel ordering (i.e., any image
orientation) when given a rendered picture, it will only produce standard
scanline-ordered rays when given a set of view parameters.
SEE ALSO¶
rcalc(1),
rpict(1),
rtcontrib(1),
rtrace(1)