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flightgear/src/Scenery/tileentry.cxx

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// tileentry.cxx -- routines to handle a scenery tile
//
// Written by Curtis Olson, started May 1998.
//
// Copyright (C) 1998 - 2001 Curtis L. Olson - http://www.flightgear.org/~curt
//
// This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
// modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
// published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
// License, or (at your option) any later version.
//
// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
// WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
// General Public License for more details.
//
// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
// along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
// Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
//
// $Id$
#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
# include <config.h>
#endif
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#include <simgear/compiler.h>
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#include <plib/ul.h>
#include <Main/main.hxx>
#include STL_STRING
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#include <simgear/bucket/newbucket.hxx>
#include <simgear/debug/logstream.hxx>
#include <simgear/math/polar3d.hxx>
#include <simgear/math/sg_geodesy.hxx>
#include <simgear/math/sg_random.h>
#include <simgear/misc/sgstream.hxx>
#include <simgear/scene/material/mat.hxx>
#include <simgear/scene/material/matlib.hxx>
#include <simgear/scene/tgdb/apt_signs.hxx>
#include <simgear/scene/tgdb/obj.hxx>
#include <simgear/scene/tgdb/vasi.hxx>
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
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#include <simgear/scene/model/placementtrans.hxx>
#include <Aircraft/aircraft.hxx>
#include <Include/general.hxx>
#include <Main/fg_props.hxx>
#include <Main/globals.hxx>
#include <Main/viewer.hxx>
#include <Scenery/scenery.hxx>
#include <Time/light.hxx>
#include "tileentry.hxx"
#include "tilemgr.hxx"
SG_USING_STD(string);
// Constructor
FGTileEntry::FGTileEntry ( const SGBucket& b )
: center( Point3D( 0.0 ) ),
tile_bucket( b ),
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
terra_transform( new ssgPlacementTransform ),
vasi_lights_transform( new ssgPlacementTransform ),
rwy_lights_transform( new ssgPlacementTransform ),
taxi_lights_transform( new ssgPlacementTransform ),
terra_range( new ssgRangeSelector ),
vasi_lights_selector( new ssgSelector ),
rwy_lights_selector( new ssgSelector ),
taxi_lights_selector( new ssgSelector ),
loaded(false),
pending_models(0),
is_inner_ring(false),
free_tracker(0)
{
// update the contents
// if ( vec3_ptrs.size() || vec2_ptrs.size() || index_ptrs.size() ) {
// SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
// "Attempting to overwrite existing or"
// << " not properly freed leaf data." );
// exit(-1);
// }
}
// Destructor
FGTileEntry::~FGTileEntry () {
// cout << "nodes = " << nodes.size() << endl;;
// delete[] nodes;
}
#if 0
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// Please keep this for reference. We use Norman's optimized routine,
// but here is what the routine really is doing.
void
FGTileEntry::WorldCoordinate( sgCoord *obj_pos, Point3D center,
double lat, double lon, double elev, double hdg)
{
// setup transforms
Point3D geod( lon * SGD_DEGREES_TO_RADIANS,
lat * SGD_DEGREES_TO_RADIANS,
elev );
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Point3D world_pos = sgGeodToCart( geod );
Point3D offset = world_pos - center;
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sgMat4 POS;
sgMakeTransMat4( POS, offset.x(), offset.y(), offset.z() );
sgVec3 obj_rt, obj_up;
sgSetVec3( obj_rt, 0.0, 1.0, 0.0); // Y axis
sgSetVec3( obj_up, 0.0, 0.0, 1.0); // Z axis
sgMat4 ROT_lon, ROT_lat, ROT_hdg;
sgMakeRotMat4( ROT_lon, lon, obj_up );
sgMakeRotMat4( ROT_lat, 90 - lat, obj_rt );
sgMakeRotMat4( ROT_hdg, hdg, obj_up );
sgMat4 TUX;
sgCopyMat4( TUX, ROT_hdg );
sgPostMultMat4( TUX, ROT_lat );
sgPostMultMat4( TUX, ROT_lon );
sgPostMultMat4( TUX, POS );
sgSetCoord( obj_pos, TUX );
}
#endif
// Norman's 'fast hack' for above
static void WorldCoordinate( sgCoord *obj_pos, Point3D center, double lat,
double lon, double elev, double hdg )
{
double lon_rad = lon * SGD_DEGREES_TO_RADIANS;
double lat_rad = lat * SGD_DEGREES_TO_RADIANS;
double hdg_rad = hdg * SGD_DEGREES_TO_RADIANS;
// setup transforms
Point3D geod( lon_rad, lat_rad, elev );
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Point3D world_pos = sgGeodToCart( geod );
Point3D offset = world_pos - center;
sgMat4 mat;
SGfloat sin_lat = (SGfloat)sin( lat_rad );
SGfloat cos_lat = (SGfloat)cos( lat_rad );
SGfloat cos_lon = (SGfloat)cos( lon_rad );
SGfloat sin_lon = (SGfloat)sin( lon_rad );
SGfloat sin_hdg = (SGfloat)sin( hdg_rad ) ;
SGfloat cos_hdg = (SGfloat)cos( hdg_rad ) ;
mat[0][0] = cos_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lat * (SGfloat)cos_lon - sin_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lon;
mat[0][1] = cos_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lat * (SGfloat)sin_lon + sin_hdg * (SGfloat)cos_lon;
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mat[0][2] = -cos_hdg * (SGfloat)cos_lat;
mat[0][3] = SG_ZERO;
mat[1][0] = -sin_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lat * (SGfloat)cos_lon - cos_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lon;
mat[1][1] = -sin_hdg * (SGfloat)sin_lat * (SGfloat)sin_lon + cos_hdg * (SGfloat)cos_lon;
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mat[1][2] = sin_hdg * (SGfloat)cos_lat;
mat[1][3] = SG_ZERO;
mat[2][0] = (SGfloat)cos_lat * (SGfloat)cos_lon;
mat[2][1] = (SGfloat)cos_lat * (SGfloat)sin_lon;
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mat[2][2] = (SGfloat)sin_lat;
mat[2][3] = SG_ZERO;
mat[3][0] = offset.x();
mat[3][1] = offset.y();
mat[3][2] = offset.z();
mat[3][3] = SG_ONE ;
sgSetCoord( obj_pos, mat );
}
// recurse an ssg tree and call removeKid() on every node from the
// bottom up. Leaves the original branch in existance, but empty so
// it can be removed by the calling routine.
static void my_remove_branch( ssgBranch * branch ) {
for ( ssgEntity *k = branch->getKid( 0 );
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k != NULL;
k = branch->getNextKid() )
{
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if ( k -> isAKindOf ( ssgTypeBranch() ) ) {
my_remove_branch( (ssgBranch *)k );
branch -> removeKid ( k );
} else if ( k -> isAKindOf ( ssgTypeLeaf() ) ) {
branch -> removeKid ( k ) ;
}
}
}
// Free "n" leaf elements of an ssg tree. returns the number of
// elements freed. An empty branch node is considered a leaf. This
// is intended to spread the load of freeing a complex tile out over
// several frames.
static int fgPartialFreeSSGtree( ssgBranch *b, int n ) {
#if 0
// for testing: we could call the following two lines and replace
// the functionality of this entire function and everything will
// get properly freed, but it will happen all at once and could
// cause a huge frame rate hit.
ssgDeRefDelete( b );
return 0;
#endif
int num_deletes = 0;
if ( n > 0 ) {
// we still have some delete budget left
// if ( b->getNumKids() > 100 ) {
// cout << "large family = " << b->getNumKids() << endl;
// }
// deleting in reverse would help if my plib patch get's
// applied, but for now it will make things slower.
// for ( int i = b->getNumKids() - 1; i >= 0 ; --i ) {
for ( int i = 0; i < b->getNumKids(); ++i ) {
ssgEntity *kid = b->getKid(i);
if ( kid->isAKindOf( ssgTypeBranch() ) && kid->getRef() <= 1 ) {
int result = fgPartialFreeSSGtree( (ssgBranch *)kid, n );
num_deletes += result;
n -= result;
if ( n < 0 ) {
break;
}
}
// remove the kid if (a) it is now empty -or- (b) it's ref
// count is > zero at which point we don't care if it's
// empty, we don't want to touch it's contents.
if ( kid->getNumKids() == 0 || kid->getRef() > 1 ) {
b->removeKid( kid );
num_deletes++;
n--;
}
}
}
return num_deletes;
}
// Clean up the memory used by this tile and delete the arrays used by
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// ssg as well as the whole ssg branch
bool FGTileEntry::free_tile() {
int delete_size = 100;
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SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG,
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"FREEING TILE = (" << tile_bucket << ")" );
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SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "(start) free_tracker = " << free_tracker );
if ( !(free_tracker & NODES) ) {
free_tracker |= NODES;
} else if ( !(free_tracker & VEC_PTRS) ) {
free_tracker |= VEC_PTRS;
} else if ( !(free_tracker & TERRA_NODE) ) {
// delete the terrain branch (this should already have been
// disconnected from the scene graph)
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "FREEING terra_transform" );
if ( fgPartialFreeSSGtree( terra_transform, delete_size ) == 0 ) {
ssgDeRefDelete( terra_transform );
free_tracker |= TERRA_NODE;
}
} else if ( !(free_tracker & GROUND_LIGHTS) && gnd_lights_transform ) {
// delete the terrain lighting branch (this should already have been
// disconnected from the scene graph)
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "FREEING gnd_lights_transform" );
if ( fgPartialFreeSSGtree( gnd_lights_transform, delete_size ) == 0 ) {
ssgDeRefDelete( gnd_lights_transform );
free_tracker |= GROUND_LIGHTS;
}
} else if ( !(free_tracker & VASI_LIGHTS) && vasi_lights_selector ) {
// delete the runway lighting branch (this should already have
// been disconnected from the scene graph)
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "FREEING vasi_lights_selector" );
if ( fgPartialFreeSSGtree( vasi_lights_selector, delete_size ) == 0 ) {
ssgDeRefDelete( vasi_lights_selector );
free_tracker |= VASI_LIGHTS;
}
} else if ( !(free_tracker & RWY_LIGHTS) && rwy_lights_selector ) {
// delete the runway lighting branch (this should already have
// been disconnected from the scene graph)
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "FREEING rwy_lights_selector" );
if ( fgPartialFreeSSGtree( rwy_lights_selector, delete_size ) == 0 ) {
ssgDeRefDelete( rwy_lights_selector );
free_tracker |= RWY_LIGHTS;
}
} else if ( !(free_tracker & TAXI_LIGHTS) && taxi_lights_selector ) {
// delete the taxi lighting branch (this should already have been
// disconnected from the scene graph)
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "FREEING taxi_lights_selector" );
if ( fgPartialFreeSSGtree( taxi_lights_selector, delete_size ) == 0 ) {
ssgDeRefDelete( taxi_lights_selector );
free_tracker |= TAXI_LIGHTS;
}
} else if ( !(free_tracker & LIGHTMAPS) ) {
free_tracker |= LIGHTMAPS;
} else {
return true;
}
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "(end) free_tracker = " << free_tracker );
// if we fall down to here, we still have work todo, return false
return false;
}
// Update the ssg transform node for this tile so it can be
// properly drawn relative to our (0,0,0) point
void FGTileEntry::prep_ssg_node( const Point3D& p, sgVec3 up, float vis) {
if ( !loaded ) return;
// visibility can change from frame to frame so we update the
// range selector cutoff's each time.
terra_range->setRange( 0, SG_ZERO );
terra_range->setRange( 1, vis + bounding_radius );
if ( gnd_lights_range ) {
gnd_lights_range->setRange( 0, SG_ZERO );
gnd_lights_range->setRange( 1, vis * 1.5 + bounding_radius );
}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 sgdTrans;
sgdSetVec3( sgdTrans, center.x(), center.y(), center.z() );
FGLight *l = (FGLight *)(globals->get_subsystem("lighting"));
if ( gnd_lights_transform ) {
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// we need to lift the lights above the terrain to avoid
// z-buffer fighting. We do this based on our altitude and
// the distance this tile is away from scenery center.
// we expect 'up' to be a unit vector coming in, but since we
// modify the value of lift_vec, we need to create a local
// copy.
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sgVec3 lift_vec;
sgCopyVec3( lift_vec, up );
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double agl;
From: "Jim Wilson" <jimw@kelcomaine.com> This is a new improved patch for the previous tile manager fixes. Rather than building dependencies between FGlocation or the viewer or fdm with tilemgr what I ended up doing was linking the pieces together in the Mainloop in main.cxx. You'll see what I mean...it's been commented fairly well. More than likely we should move that chunk somewhere...just not sure where yet. The changes seem clean now. As I get more ideas there could be some further improvement in organizing the update in tilemgr. You'll note that I left an override in there for the tilemgr::update() function to preserve earlier functionality if someone needs it (e.g. usage independent of an fdm or viewer), not to mention there are a few places in flightgear that call it directly that have not been changed to the new interface (and may not need to be). The code has been optimized to avoid duplicate traversals and seems to run generally quite well. Note that there can be a short delay reloading tiles that have been dropped from static views. We could call the tile scheduler on a view switch, but it's not a big deal and at the moment I'd like to get this in so people can try it and comment on it as it is. Everything has been resycned with CVS tonight and I've included the description submitted earlier (below). Best, Jim Changes synced with CVS approx 20:30EDT 2002-05-09 (after this evenings updates). Files: http://www.spiderbark.com/fgfs/viewer-update-20020516.tar.gz or http://www.spiderbark.com/fgfs/viewer-update-20020516.diffs.gz Description: In a nutshell, these patches begin to take what was one value for ground elevation and calculate ground elevation values seperately for the FDM and the viewer (eye position). Several outstanding view related bugs have been fixed. With the introduction of the new viewer code a lot of that Flight Gear code broke related to use of a global variable called "scenery.cur_elev". Therefore the ground_elevation and other associated items (like the current tile bucket) is maintained per FDM instance and per View. Each of these has a "point" or location that can be identified. See changes to FGLocation class and main.cxx. Most of the problems related to the new viewer in terms of sky, ground and runway lights, and tower views are fixed. There are four minor problems remaining. 1) The sun/moon spins when you pan the "lookat" tower view only (view #3). 2) Under stress (esp. magic carpet full speed with max visibility), there is a memory leak in the tile caching that was not introduced with these changes. 3) I have not tested these changes or made corrections to the ADA or External FDM interfaces. 4) The change view function doesn't call the time/light update (not a problem unless a tower is very far away). Details: FDM/flight.cxx, flight.hxx - FGInterface ties to FGAircraftModel so that it's location data can be accessed for runway (ground elevation under aircraft) elevation. FDM/larsim.cxx, larcsim.hxx - gets runway elevation from FGInterface now. Commented out function that is causing a namespace conflict, hasn't been called with recent code anyway. FDM/JSBSim/JSBSim.cxx, YASim/YASim.cxx - gets runway elevation from FGInterface now. Scenery/newcache.cxx, newcache.hxx - changed caching scheme to time based (oldest tiles discard). Scenery/tileentry.cxx, tileentry.hxx - added place to record time, changed rendering to reference viewer altitude in order to fix a problem with ground and runway lights. Scenery/tilemgr.cxx, tilemgr.hxx - Modified update() to accept values for multiple locations. Refresh function added in order to periodically make the tiles current for a non-moving view (like a tower). Main/fg_init.cxx - register event for making tiles current in a non-moving view (like a tower). Main/location.hxx - added support for current ground elevation data. Main/main.cxx - added second tilemgr call for fdm, fixed places where viewer position data was required for correct sky rendering. Main/options.cxx - fixed segfault reported by Curtis when using --view-offset command line parameter. Main/viewer.cxx, viewer.hxx - removed fudging of view position. Fixed numerous bugs that were causing eye and target values to get mixed up.
2002-05-17 17:25:28 +00:00
agl = globals->get_current_view()->getAltitudeASL_ft()
* SG_FEET_TO_METER - globals->get_scenery()->get_cur_elev();
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Compute the distance of the scenery center from the view position.
double dist = center.distance3D(p);
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if ( general.get_glDepthBits() > 16 ) {
sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 10.0 + agl / 100.0 + dist / 10000 );
} else {
sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 10.0 + agl / 20.0 + dist / 5000 );
}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 dlt_trans;
sgdCopyVec3( dlt_trans, sgdTrans );
sgdVec3 dlift_vec;
sgdSetVec3( dlift_vec, lift_vec );
sgdAddVec3( dlt_trans, dlift_vec );
gnd_lights_transform->setTransform( dlt_trans );
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// select which set of lights based on sun angle
float sun_angle = l->get_sun_angle() * SGD_RADIANS_TO_DEGREES;
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if ( sun_angle > 95 ) {
gnd_lights_brightness->select(0x04);
} else if ( sun_angle > 92 ) {
gnd_lights_brightness->select(0x02);
} else if ( sun_angle > 89 ) {
gnd_lights_brightness->select(0x01);
} else {
gnd_lights_brightness->select(0x00);
}
}
if ( vasi_lights_transform ) {
// we need to lift the lights above the terrain to avoid
// z-buffer fighting. We do this based on our altitude and
// the distance this tile is away from scenery center.
sgVec3 lift_vec;
sgCopyVec3( lift_vec, up );
// we fudge agl by 30 meters so that the lifting function
// doesn't phase in until we are > 30m agl.
double agl;
agl = globals->get_current_view()->getAltitudeASL_ft()
* SG_FEET_TO_METER - globals->get_scenery()->get_cur_elev()
- 30.0;
if ( agl < 0.0 ) {
agl = 0.0;
}
if ( general.get_glDepthBits() > 16 ) {
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sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.25 + agl / 400.0 + agl*agl / 5000000.0 );
} else {
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sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.25 + agl / 150.0 );
}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 dlt_trans;
sgdCopyVec3( dlt_trans, sgdTrans );
sgdVec3 dlift_vec;
sgdSetVec3( dlift_vec, lift_vec );
sgdAddVec3( dlt_trans, dlift_vec );
vasi_lights_transform->setTransform( dlt_trans );
// generally, vasi lights are always on
vasi_lights_selector->select(0x01);
}
if ( rwy_lights_transform ) {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
// we need to lift the lights above the terrain to avoid
// z-buffer fighting. We do this based on our altitude and
// the distance this tile is away from scenery center.
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sgVec3 lift_vec;
sgCopyVec3( lift_vec, up );
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// we fudge agl by 30 meters so that the lifting function
// doesn't phase in until we are > 30m agl.
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double agl;
From: "Jim Wilson" <jimw@kelcomaine.com> This is a new improved patch for the previous tile manager fixes. Rather than building dependencies between FGlocation or the viewer or fdm with tilemgr what I ended up doing was linking the pieces together in the Mainloop in main.cxx. You'll see what I mean...it's been commented fairly well. More than likely we should move that chunk somewhere...just not sure where yet. The changes seem clean now. As I get more ideas there could be some further improvement in organizing the update in tilemgr. You'll note that I left an override in there for the tilemgr::update() function to preserve earlier functionality if someone needs it (e.g. usage independent of an fdm or viewer), not to mention there are a few places in flightgear that call it directly that have not been changed to the new interface (and may not need to be). The code has been optimized to avoid duplicate traversals and seems to run generally quite well. Note that there can be a short delay reloading tiles that have been dropped from static views. We could call the tile scheduler on a view switch, but it's not a big deal and at the moment I'd like to get this in so people can try it and comment on it as it is. Everything has been resycned with CVS tonight and I've included the description submitted earlier (below). Best, Jim Changes synced with CVS approx 20:30EDT 2002-05-09 (after this evenings updates). Files: http://www.spiderbark.com/fgfs/viewer-update-20020516.tar.gz or http://www.spiderbark.com/fgfs/viewer-update-20020516.diffs.gz Description: In a nutshell, these patches begin to take what was one value for ground elevation and calculate ground elevation values seperately for the FDM and the viewer (eye position). Several outstanding view related bugs have been fixed. With the introduction of the new viewer code a lot of that Flight Gear code broke related to use of a global variable called "scenery.cur_elev". Therefore the ground_elevation and other associated items (like the current tile bucket) is maintained per FDM instance and per View. Each of these has a "point" or location that can be identified. See changes to FGLocation class and main.cxx. Most of the problems related to the new viewer in terms of sky, ground and runway lights, and tower views are fixed. There are four minor problems remaining. 1) The sun/moon spins when you pan the "lookat" tower view only (view #3). 2) Under stress (esp. magic carpet full speed with max visibility), there is a memory leak in the tile caching that was not introduced with these changes. 3) I have not tested these changes or made corrections to the ADA or External FDM interfaces. 4) The change view function doesn't call the time/light update (not a problem unless a tower is very far away). Details: FDM/flight.cxx, flight.hxx - FGInterface ties to FGAircraftModel so that it's location data can be accessed for runway (ground elevation under aircraft) elevation. FDM/larsim.cxx, larcsim.hxx - gets runway elevation from FGInterface now. Commented out function that is causing a namespace conflict, hasn't been called with recent code anyway. FDM/JSBSim/JSBSim.cxx, YASim/YASim.cxx - gets runway elevation from FGInterface now. Scenery/newcache.cxx, newcache.hxx - changed caching scheme to time based (oldest tiles discard). Scenery/tileentry.cxx, tileentry.hxx - added place to record time, changed rendering to reference viewer altitude in order to fix a problem with ground and runway lights. Scenery/tilemgr.cxx, tilemgr.hxx - Modified update() to accept values for multiple locations. Refresh function added in order to periodically make the tiles current for a non-moving view (like a tower). Main/fg_init.cxx - register event for making tiles current in a non-moving view (like a tower). Main/location.hxx - added support for current ground elevation data. Main/main.cxx - added second tilemgr call for fdm, fixed places where viewer position data was required for correct sky rendering. Main/options.cxx - fixed segfault reported by Curtis when using --view-offset command line parameter. Main/viewer.cxx, viewer.hxx - removed fudging of view position. Fixed numerous bugs that were causing eye and target values to get mixed up.
2002-05-17 17:25:28 +00:00
agl = globals->get_current_view()->getAltitudeASL_ft()
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* SG_FEET_TO_METER - globals->get_scenery()->get_cur_elev()
- 30.0;
if ( agl < 0.0 ) {
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agl = 0.0;
}
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if ( general.get_glDepthBits() > 16 ) {
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sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.01 + agl / 400.0 + agl*agl / 5000000.0 );
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} else {
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sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.25 + agl / 150.0 );
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}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 dlt_trans;
sgdCopyVec3( dlt_trans, sgdTrans );
sgdVec3 dlift_vec;
sgdSetVec3( dlift_vec, lift_vec );
sgdAddVec3( dlt_trans, dlift_vec );
rwy_lights_transform->setTransform( dlt_trans );
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
// turn runway lights on/off based on sun angle and visibility
float sun_angle = l->get_sun_angle() * SGD_RADIANS_TO_DEGREES;
if ( sun_angle > 85 ||
(fgGetDouble("/environment/visibility-m") < 5000.0) ) {
rwy_lights_selector->select(0x01);
} else {
rwy_lights_selector->select(0x00);
}
}
if ( taxi_lights_transform ) {
// we need to lift the lights above the terrain to avoid
// z-buffer fighting. We do this based on our altitude and
// the distance this tile is away from scenery center.
sgVec3 lift_vec;
sgCopyVec3( lift_vec, up );
// we fudge agl by 30 meters so that the lifting function
// doesn't phase in until we are > 30m agl.
double agl;
agl = globals->get_current_view()->getAltitudeASL_ft()
* SG_FEET_TO_METER - globals->get_scenery()->get_cur_elev()
- 30.0;
if ( agl < 0.0 ) {
agl = 0.0;
}
if ( general.get_glDepthBits() > 16 ) {
2003-12-30 07:04:40 +00:00
sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.01 + agl / 400.0 + agl*agl / 5000000.0 );
} else {
2003-12-30 07:04:40 +00:00
sgScaleVec3( lift_vec, 0.25 + agl / 150.0 );
}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 dlt_trans;
sgdCopyVec3( dlt_trans, sgdTrans );
sgdVec3 dlift_vec;
sgdSetVec3( dlift_vec, lift_vec );
sgdAddVec3( dlt_trans, dlift_vec );
taxi_lights_transform->setTransform( dlt_trans );
// turn taxi lights on/off based on sun angle and visibility
float sun_angle = l->get_sun_angle() * SGD_RADIANS_TO_DEGREES;
if ( sun_angle > 85 ||
(fgGetDouble("/environment/visibility-m") < 5000.0) ) {
taxi_lights_selector->select(0x01);
} else {
taxi_lights_selector->select(0x00);
}
}
if ( vasi_lights_transform && is_inner_ring ) {
// now we need to traverse the list of vasi lights and update
// their coloring (but only for the inner ring, no point in
// doing this extra work for tiles that are relatively far
// away.)
for ( int i = 0; i < vasi_lights_transform->getNumKids(); ++i ) {
// cout << "vasi root = " << i << endl;
ssgBranch *v = (ssgBranch *)vasi_lights_transform->getKid(i);
for ( int j = 0; j < v->getNumKids(); ++j ) {
// cout << " vasi branch = " << j << endl;
ssgTransform *kid = (ssgTransform *)v->getKid(j);
SGVASIUserData *vasi = (SGVASIUserData *)kid->getUserData();
if ( vasi != NULL ) {
sgdVec3 s;
sgdCopyVec3( s, vasi->get_abs_pos() );
Point3D start(s[0], s[1], s[2]);
sgdVec3 d;
sgdCopyVec3( d, globals->get_current_view()->get_absolute_view_pos() );
double dist = sgdDistanceVec3( s, d );
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if ( dist < 10000 ) {
double cur_alt
= globals->get_current_view()->getAltitudeASL_ft()
* SG_FEET_TO_METER;
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double y = cur_alt - vasi->get_alt_m();
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double angle;
if ( dist != 0 ) {
angle = asin( y / dist );
} else {
angle = 0.0;
}
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vasi->set_color(angle * SG_RADIANS_TO_DEGREES);
}
// cout << " dist = " << dist
// << " angle = " << angle * SG_RADIANS_TO_DEGREES
// << endl;
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT, "no vasi data!" );
}
}
}
}
}
// Set up lights rendering call backs
static int fgLightsPredraw( ssgEntity *e ) {
2002-01-20 05:58:34 +00:00
#if 0
if (glPointParameterIsSupported) {
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static float quadratic[3] = {1.0, 0.01, 0.0001};
glPointParameterfvProc(GL_DISTANCE_ATTENUATION_EXT, quadratic);
glPointParameterfProc(GL_POINT_SIZE_MIN_EXT, 1.0);
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glPointSize(4.0);
}
#endif
return true;
}
static int fgLightsPostdraw( ssgEntity *e ) {
2002-01-20 05:58:34 +00:00
#if 0
if (glPointParameterIsSupported) {
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static float default_attenuation[3] = {1.0, 0.0, 0.0};
glPointParameterfvProc(GL_DISTANCE_ATTENUATION_EXT,
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default_attenuation);
glPointSize(1.0);
}
#endif
return true;
}
ssgLeaf* FGTileEntry::gen_lights( SGMaterialLib *matlib, ssgVertexArray *lights,
int inc, float bright )
{
// generate a repeatable random seed
float *p1 = lights->get( 0 );
unsigned int *seed = (unsigned int *)p1;
sg_srandom( *seed );
int size = lights->getNum() / inc;
// Allocate ssg structure
ssgVertexArray *vl = new ssgVertexArray( size + 1 );
ssgNormalArray *nl = NULL;
ssgTexCoordArray *tl = NULL;
ssgColourArray *cl = new ssgColourArray( size + 1 );
sgVec4 color;
for ( int i = 0; i < lights->getNum(); ++i ) {
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// this loop is slightly less efficient than it otherwise
// could be, but we want a red light to always be red, and a
// yellow light to always be yellow, etc. so we are trying to
// preserve the random sequence.
float zombie = sg_random();
if ( i % inc == 0 ) {
vl->add( lights->get(i) );
// factor = sg_random() ^ 2, range = 0 .. 1 concentrated towards 0
float factor = sg_random();
factor *= factor;
if ( zombie > 0.5 ) {
// 50% chance of yellowish
sgSetVec4( color, 0.9, 0.9, 0.3, bright - factor * 0.2 );
} else if ( zombie > 0.15 ) {
// 35% chance of whitish
sgSetVec4( color, 0.9, 0.9, 0.8, bright - factor * 0.2 );
} else if ( zombie > 0.05 ) {
// 10% chance of orangish
sgSetVec4( color, 0.9, 0.6, 0.2, bright - factor * 0.2 );
} else {
// 5% chance of redish
sgSetVec4( color, 0.9, 0.2, 0.2, bright - factor * 0.2 );
}
cl->add( color );
}
}
// create ssg leaf
ssgLeaf *leaf =
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
new ssgVtxTable ( GL_POINTS, vl, nl, tl, cl );
// assign state
SGMaterial *mat = matlib->find( "GROUND_LIGHTS" );
leaf->setState( mat->get_state() );
leaf->setCallback( SSG_CALLBACK_PREDRAW, fgLightsPredraw );
leaf->setCallback( SSG_CALLBACK_POSTDRAW, fgLightsPostdraw );
return leaf;
}
bool FGTileEntry::obj_load( const string& path,
ssgBranch *geometry,
ssgBranch *vasi_lights,
ssgBranch *rwy_lights,
ssgBranch *taxi_lights,
ssgVertexArray *ground_lights, bool is_base )
{
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Point3D c; // returned center point
double br; // returned bounding radius
bool use_random_objects =
fgGetBool("/sim/rendering/random-objects", true);
// try loading binary format
if ( sgBinObjLoad( path, is_base,
&c, &br, globals->get_matlib(), use_random_objects,
geometry, vasi_lights, rwy_lights, taxi_lights,
ground_lights ) )
{
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if ( is_base ) {
center = c;
bounding_radius = br;
}
}
return (geometry != NULL);
}
void
FGTileEntry::load( const string_list &path_list, bool is_base )
{
bool found_tile_base = false;
// obj_load() will generate ground lighting for us ...
ssgVertexArray *light_pts = new ssgVertexArray( 100 );
ssgBranch* new_tile = new ssgBranch;
unsigned int i = 0;
while ( i < path_list.size() ) {
bool has_base = false;
// Generate names for later use
string index_str = tile_bucket.gen_index_str();
SGPath tile_path = path_list[i];
tile_path.append( tile_bucket.gen_base_path() );
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SGPath basename = tile_path;
basename.append( index_str );
// string path = basename.str();
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SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "Loading tile " << basename.str() );
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#define FG_MAX_LIGHTS 1000
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// Check for master .stg (scene terra gear) file
SGPath stg_name = basename;
stg_name.concat( ".stg" );
sg_gzifstream in( stg_name.str() );
if ( in.is_open() ) {
string token, name;
while ( ! in.eof() ) {
in >> token;
if ( token[0] == '#' ) {
in >> ::skipeol;
continue;
}
// Load only once (first found)
if ( token == "OBJECT_BASE" ) {
in >> name >> ::skipws;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " name = " << name );
if (!found_tile_base) {
found_tile_base = true;
has_base = true;
SGPath custom_path = tile_path;
custom_path.append( name );
ssgBranch *geometry = new ssgBranch;
if ( obj_load( custom_path.str(),
geometry, NULL, NULL, NULL, light_pts,
true ) )
{
geometry->getKid( 0 )->setTravCallback(
SSG_CALLBACK_PRETRAV,
&FGTileMgr::tile_filter_cb );
new_tile -> addKid( geometry );
} else {
delete geometry;
}
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} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, " (skipped)" );
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}
// Load only if base is not in another file
} else if ( token == "OBJECT" ) {
if (!found_tile_base || has_base) {
in >> name >> ::skipws;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " name = " << name );
SGPath custom_path = tile_path;
custom_path.append( name );
ssgBranch *geometry = new ssgBranch;
ssgBranch *vasi_lights = new ssgBranch;
ssgBranch *rwy_lights = new ssgBranch;
ssgBranch *taxi_lights = new ssgBranch;
if ( obj_load( custom_path.str(),
geometry, vasi_lights, rwy_lights,
taxi_lights, NULL, false ) )
{
if ( geometry -> getNumKids() > 0 ) {
geometry->getKid( 0 )->setTravCallback(
SSG_CALLBACK_PRETRAV,
&FGTileMgr::tile_filter_cb );
new_tile -> addKid( geometry );
} else {
delete geometry;
}
if ( vasi_lights -> getNumKids() > 0 ) {
vasi_lights_transform -> addKid( vasi_lights );
} else {
delete vasi_lights;
}
if ( rwy_lights -> getNumKids() > 0 ) {
rwy_lights_transform -> addKid( rwy_lights );
} else {
delete rwy_lights;
}
if ( taxi_lights -> getNumKids() > 0 ) {
taxi_lights_transform -> addKid( taxi_lights );
} else {
delete taxi_lights;
}
} else {
delete geometry;
delete vasi_lights;
delete rwy_lights;
delete taxi_lights;
}
}
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// Always OK to load
} else if ( token == "OBJECT_STATIC" ||
token == "OBJECT_SHARED" ) {
// load object info
double lon, lat, elev, hdg;
in >> name >> lon >> lat >> elev >> hdg >> ::skipws;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " name = " << name
<< " pos = " << lon << ", " << lat
<< " elevation = " << elev
<< " heading = " << hdg );
// object loading is deferred to main render thread,
// but lets figure out the paths right now.
SGPath custom_path;
if ( token == "OBJECT_STATIC" ) {
custom_path= tile_path;
} else {
custom_path = globals->get_fg_root();
}
custom_path.append( name );
sgCoord obj_pos;
WorldCoordinate( &obj_pos, center, lat, lon, elev, hdg );
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
ssgTransform *obj_trans = new ssgTransform;
obj_trans->setTransform( &obj_pos );
// wire as much of the scene graph together as we can
new_tile->addKid( obj_trans );
// bump up the pending models count
pending_models++;
// push an entry onto the model load queue
FGDeferredModel *dm
= new FGDeferredModel( custom_path.str(),
tile_path.str(),
Make a subtle change to tile loading/unloading policy in order to make the tile paging system much more robust when position change is very rapid and sporadic. Recall that we must load 3d models in the main render thread because model loading can trigger opengl calls (i.e. with texture loading) and all opengl calls *must* happen in the main render thread. To accomplish this we load the base tile in the pager thread and build a work queue of external models that need to be loaded. We never allow a tile to be paged out of the tile cache until all it's pending model loads are complete. However, when changing position very rapidly, we can quickly create a huge backlog of pending model loads because we are changing positions faster than we can load the associated models for the existing tiles. The end result is that tiles that are long out of range can't be removed because there is still a huge backlog of pending model load requests and memory blows up. This change being committed allows the tile paging system to remove tiles if they are out of range, even when there are pending models to load. The model loading code in the render thread can now check to see if the tile exists and discard any model load request for tiles that no longer exist. This situation should never occur in normal operation, but could occur in "contrived" situations where an external script was rapidly changing the simulator position to then be able to query FG terrain height, and doing this for a large number of points that are distributed across a large area.
2004-09-15 15:52:05 +00:00
tile_bucket,
this, obj_trans );
FGTileMgr::model_ready( dm );
// Do we even use this one?
} else if ( token == "OBJECT_TAXI_SIGN" ) {
// load object info
double lon, lat, elev, hdg;
in >> name >> lon >> lat >> elev >> hdg >> ::skipws;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " name = " << name
<< " pos = " << lon << ", " << lat
<< " elevation = " << elev
<< " heading = " << hdg );
// load the object itself
SGPath custom_path = tile_path;
custom_path.append( name );
sgCoord obj_pos;
WorldCoordinate( &obj_pos, center, lat, lon, elev, hdg );
ssgTransform *obj_trans = new ssgTransform;
obj_trans->setTransform( &obj_pos );
ssgBranch *custom_obj
= sgMakeTaxiSign( globals->get_matlib(),
custom_path.str(), name );
// wire the pieces together
if ( custom_obj != NULL ) {
obj_trans -> addKid( custom_obj );
}
new_tile->addKid( obj_trans );
// Do we even use this one?
} else if ( token == "OBJECT_RUNWAY_SIGN" ) {
// load object info
double lon, lat, elev, hdg;
in >> name >> lon >> lat >> elev >> hdg >> ::skipws;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " name = " << name
<< " pos = " << lon << ", " << lat
<< " elevation = " << elev
<< " heading = " << hdg );
// load the object itself
SGPath custom_path = tile_path;
custom_path.append( name );
sgCoord obj_pos;
WorldCoordinate( &obj_pos, center, lat, lon, elev, hdg );
ssgTransform *obj_trans = new ssgTransform;
obj_trans->setTransform( &obj_pos );
ssgBranch *custom_obj
= sgMakeRunwaySign( globals->get_matlib(),
custom_path.str(), name );
// wire the pieces together
if ( custom_obj != NULL ) {
obj_trans -> addKid( custom_obj );
}
new_tile->addKid( obj_trans );
// I don't think we use this, either
} else if ( token == "RWY_LIGHTS" ) {
double lon, lat, hdg, len, width;
string common, end1, end2;
in >> lon >> lat >> hdg >> len >> width
>> common >> end1 >> end2;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_INFO, "token = " << token
<< " pos = " << lon << ", " << lat
<< " hdg = " << hdg
<< " size = " << len << ", " << width
<< " codes = " << common << " "
<< end1 << " " << end2 );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG,
"Unknown token " << token << " in "
<< stg_name.str() );
in >> ::skipws;
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
}
}
}
i++;
}
if ( !found_tile_base ) {
// no tile base found, generate an ocean tile on the fly for
// this area
ssgBranch *geometry = new ssgBranch;
Point3D c;
double br;
if ( sgGenTile( path_list[0], tile_bucket, &c, &br,
globals->get_matlib(), geometry ) )
{
center = c;
bounding_radius = br;
new_tile -> addKid( geometry );
} else {
delete geometry;
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Warning: failed to generate ocean tile!" );
}
}
if ( new_tile != NULL ) {
terra_range->addKid( new_tile );
}
terra_transform->addKid( terra_range );
// calculate initial tile offset
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
sgdVec3 sgdTrans;
sgdSetVec3( sgdTrans, center.x(), center.y(), center.z() );
terra_transform->setTransform( sgdTrans );
sgdVec3 sgdCenter;
Point3D p = globals->get_scenery()->get_center();
sgdSetVec3( sgdCenter, p.x(), p.y(), p.z() );
terra_transform->setSceneryCenter( sgdCenter );
globals->get_scenery()->register_placement_transform(terra_transform);
// terrain->addKid( terra_transform );
// Add ground lights to scene graph if any exist
gnd_lights_transform = NULL;
gnd_lights_range = NULL;
if ( light_pts->getNum() ) {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "generating lights" );
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
gnd_lights_transform = new ssgPlacementTransform;
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gnd_lights_range = new ssgRangeSelector;
gnd_lights_brightness = new ssgSelector;
ssgLeaf *lights;
lights = gen_lights( globals->get_matlib(), light_pts, 4, 0.7 );
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
gnd_lights_brightness->addKid( lights );
lights = gen_lights( globals->get_matlib(), light_pts, 2, 0.85 );
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gnd_lights_brightness->addKid( lights );
lights = gen_lights( globals->get_matlib(), light_pts, 1, 1.0 );
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
gnd_lights_brightness->addKid( lights );
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
gnd_lights_range->addKid( gnd_lights_brightness );
gnd_lights_transform->addKid( gnd_lights_range );
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
gnd_lights_transform->setTransform( sgdTrans );
gnd_lights_transform->setSceneryCenter( sgdCenter );
globals->get_scenery()->register_placement_transform(gnd_lights_transform);
}
// Update vasi lights transform
if ( vasi_lights_transform->getNumKids() > 0 ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
vasi_lights_transform->setTransform( sgdTrans );
vasi_lights_transform->setSceneryCenter( sgdCenter );
globals->get_scenery()->register_placement_transform(vasi_lights_transform);
}
// Update runway lights transform
if ( rwy_lights_transform->getNumKids() > 0 ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
rwy_lights_transform->setTransform( sgdTrans );
rwy_lights_transform->setSceneryCenter( sgdCenter );
globals->get_scenery()->register_placement_transform(rwy_lights_transform);
}
// Update taxi lights transform
if ( taxi_lights_transform->getNumKids() > 0 ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
taxi_lights_transform->setTransform( sgdTrans );
taxi_lights_transform->setSceneryCenter( sgdCenter );
globals->get_scenery()->register_placement_transform(taxi_lights_transform);
}
}
void
FGTileEntry::makeDList( ssgBranch *b )
{
int nb = b->getNumKids();
for (int i = 0; i<nb; i++) {
ssgEntity *e = b->getKid(i);
if (e->isAKindOf(ssgTypeLeaf())) {
((ssgLeaf*)e)->makeDList();
} else if (e->isAKindOf(ssgTypeBranch())) {
makeDList( (ssgBranch*)e );
}
}
}
void
FGTileEntry::add_ssg_nodes( ssgBranch *terrain_branch,
ssgBranch *gnd_lights_branch,
ssgBranch *vasi_lights_branch,
ssgBranch *rwy_lights_branch,
ssgBranch *taxi_lights_branch )
{
// bump up the ref count so we can remove this later without
// having ssg try to free the memory.
#if PLIB_VERSION > 183
if ( fgGetBool( "/sim/rendering/use-display-list", true ) ) {
makeDList( terra_transform );
}
#endif
terra_transform->ref();
terrain_branch->addKid( terra_transform );
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG,
"connected a tile into scene graph. terra_transform = "
<< terra_transform );
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "num parents now = "
<< terra_transform->getNumParents() );
if ( gnd_lights_transform != NULL ) {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
// bump up the ref count so we can remove this later without
// having ssg try to free the memory.
gnd_lights_transform->ref();
gnd_lights_branch->addKid( gnd_lights_transform );
}
if ( vasi_lights_transform != NULL ) {
// bump up the ref count so we can remove this later without
// having ssg try to free the memory.
vasi_lights_selector->ref();
vasi_lights_selector->addKid( vasi_lights_transform );
vasi_lights_branch->addKid( vasi_lights_selector );
}
if ( rwy_lights_transform != NULL ) {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
// bump up the ref count so we can remove this later without
// having ssg try to free the memory.
rwy_lights_selector->ref();
rwy_lights_selector->addKid( rwy_lights_transform );
rwy_lights_branch->addKid( rwy_lights_selector );
}
if ( taxi_lights_transform != NULL ) {
// bump up the ref count so we can remove this later without
// having ssg try to free the memory.
taxi_lights_selector->ref();
taxi_lights_selector->addKid( taxi_lights_transform );
taxi_lights_branch->addKid( taxi_lights_selector );
}
loaded = true;
}
void
FGTileEntry::disconnect_ssg_nodes()
{
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "disconnecting ssg nodes" );
if ( ! loaded ) {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "removing a not-fully loaded tile!" );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_DEBUG, "removing a fully loaded tile! terra_transform = " << terra_transform );
}
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Unregister that one at the scenery manager
globals->get_scenery()->unregister_placement_transform(terra_transform);
// find the terrain branch parent
int pcount = terra_transform->getNumParents();
if ( pcount > 0 ) {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
// find the first parent (should only be one)
ssgBranch *parent = terra_transform->getParent( 0 ) ;
if( parent ) {
// disconnect the tile (we previously ref()'d it so it
// won't get freed now)
parent->removeKid( terra_transform );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"parent pointer is NULL! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
} else {
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Parent count is zero for an ssg tile! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
// find the ground lighting branch
if ( gnd_lights_transform ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Unregister that one at the scenery manager
globals->get_scenery()->unregister_placement_transform(gnd_lights_transform);
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
pcount = gnd_lights_transform->getNumParents();
if ( pcount > 0 ) {
// find the first parent (should only be one)
ssgBranch *parent = gnd_lights_transform->getParent( 0 ) ;
if( parent ) {
// disconnect the light branch (we previously ref()'d
// it so it won't get freed now)
parent->removeKid( gnd_lights_transform );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"parent pointer is NULL! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Parent count is zero for an ssg light tile! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
}
// find the vasi lighting branch
if ( vasi_lights_transform ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Unregister that one at the scenery manager
globals->get_scenery()->unregister_placement_transform(vasi_lights_transform);
pcount = vasi_lights_transform->getNumParents();
if ( pcount > 0 ) {
// find the first parent (should only be one)
ssgBranch *parent = vasi_lights_transform->getParent( 0 ) ;
if( parent ) {
// disconnect the light branch (we previously ref()'d
// it so it won't get freed now)
parent->removeKid( vasi_lights_transform );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"parent pointer is NULL! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Parent count is zero for an ssg light tile! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
}
// find the runway lighting branch
if ( rwy_lights_transform ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Unregister that one at the scenery manager
globals->get_scenery()->unregister_placement_transform(rwy_lights_transform);
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
pcount = rwy_lights_transform->getNumParents();
if ( pcount > 0 ) {
// find the first parent (should only be one)
ssgBranch *parent = rwy_lights_transform->getParent( 0 ) ;
if( parent ) {
// disconnect the light branch (we previously ref()'d
// it so it won't get freed now)
parent->removeKid( rwy_lights_transform );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"parent pointer is NULL! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Parent count is zero for an ssg light tile! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
}
// find the taxi lighting branch
if ( taxi_lights_transform ) {
Mathias: I have done a patch to eliminate the jitter of 3D-objects near the viewpoint (for example 3D cockpit objects). The problem is the roundoff accuracy of the float values used in the scenegraph together with the transforms of the eyepoint relative to the scenery center. The solution will be to move the scenery center near the view point. This way floats relative accuracy is enough to show a stable picture. To get that right I have introduced a transform node for the scenegraph which is responsible for that shift and uses double values as long as possible. The scenery subsystem now has a list of all those transforms required to place objects in the world and will tell all those transforms that the scenery center has changed when the set_scenery_center() of the scenery subsystem is called. The problem was not solvable by SGModelPlacement and SGLocation, since not all objects, especially the scenery, are placed using these classes. The first approach was to have the scenery center exactly at the eyepoint. This works well for the cockpit. But then the ground jitters a bit below the aircraft. With our default views you can't see that, but that F-18 has a camera view below the left engine intake with the nose gear and the ground in its field of view, here I could see that. Having the scenery center constant will still have this roundoff problems, but like it is now too, the roundoff error here is exactly the same in each frame, so you will not notice any jitter. The real solution is now to keep the scenery center constant as long as it is in a ball of 30m radius around the view point. If the scenery center is outside this ball, just put it at the view point. As a sideeffect of now beeing able to switch the scenery center in the whole scenegraph with one function call, I was able to remove a one half of a problem when switching views, where the scenery center was far off for one or two frames past switching from one view to the next. Also included is a fix to the other half of this problem, where the view position was not yet copied into a view when it is switched (at least under glut). This was responsible for the 'Error: ...' messages of the cloud subsystem when views were switched.
2005-04-29 14:38:24 +00:00
// Unregister that one at the scenery manager
globals->get_scenery()->unregister_placement_transform(taxi_lights_transform);
pcount = taxi_lights_transform->getNumParents();
if ( pcount > 0 ) {
// find the first parent (should only be one)
ssgBranch *parent = taxi_lights_transform->getParent( 0 ) ;
if( parent ) {
// disconnect the light branch (we previously ref()'d
// it so it won't get freed now)
parent->removeKid( taxi_lights_transform );
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"parent pointer is NULL! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
2002-09-23 15:27:46 +00:00
} else {
SG_LOG( SG_TERRAIN, SG_ALERT,
"Parent count is zero for an ssg light tile! Dying" );
exit(-1);
}
}
}