RTRACE

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
NOTES
EXAMPLES
ENVIRONMENT
FILES
DIAGNOSTICS
AUTHOR
SEE ALSO

NAME

rtrace - trace rays in RADIANCE scene

SYNOPSIS

rtrace [ options ] [ $EVAR ] [ @file ] octree
rtrace [ options ] -defaults

DESCRIPTION

Rtrace traces rays from the standard input through the RADIANCE scene given by octree and sends the results to the standard output. (The octree may be given as the output of a command enclosed in quotes and preceded by a ‘!’.) Input for each ray is:

xorg yorg zorg xdir ydir zdir

If the direction vector is (0,0,0), a bogus record is printed and the output is flushed if the -x value is one or zero. (See the notes on this option below.) This may be useful for programs that run rtrace as a separate process. In the second form, the default values for the options (modified by those options present) are printed with a brief explanation.

Options may be given on the command line and/or read from the environment and/or read from a file. A command argument beginning with a dollar sign (’$’) is immediately replaced by the contents of the given environment variable. A command argument beginning with an at sign (’@’) is immediately replaced by the contents of the given file. Most options are followed by one or more arguments, which must be separated from the option and each other by white space. The exceptions to this rule are the boolean options. Normally, the appearance of a boolean option causes a feature to be "toggled", that is switched from off to on or on to off depending on its previous state. Boolean options may also be set explicitly by following them immediately with a ’+’ or ’-’, meaning on or off, respectively. Synonyms for ’+’ are any of the characters "yYtT1", and synonyms for ’-’ are any of the characters "nNfF0". All other characters will generate an error.

-fio

Format input according to the character i and output according to the character o. Rtrace understands the following input and output formats: ’a’ for ascii, ’f’ for single-precision floating point, and ’d’ for double-precision floating point. In addition to these three choices, the character ’c’ may be used to denote 4-byte RGBE (Radiance) color format for the output of individual color values only, and the -x and -y options should also be specified to create a valid output picture. If the output character is missing, the input format is used.

Note that there is no space between this option and its argument.

-ospec

Produce output fields according to spec. Characters are interpreted as follows:

o

origin (input)

d

direction (normalized)

v

value (radiance)

V

contribution (radiance)

w

weight

W

color coefficient

l

effective length of ray

L

first intersection distance

c

local (u,v) coordinates

p

point of intersection

n

normal at intersection (perturbed)

N

normal at intersection (unperturbed)

s

surface name

m

modifier name

M

material name

r

mirrored value contribution

x

unmirrored value contribution

R

mirrored ray length

X

unmirrored ray length

~

tilde (end of trace marker)

If the letter ’t’ appears in spec, then the fields following will be printed for every ray traced, not just the final result. If the capital letter ’T’ is given instead of ’t’, then all rays will be reported, including shadow testing rays to light sources. Spawned rays are indented one tab for each level. The tilde marker (’~’) is a handy way of differentiating the final ray value from daughter values in a traced ray tree, and usually appears right before the ’t’ or ’T’ output flags. E.g., -ov~TmW will emit a tilde followed by a tab at the end of each trace, which can be easily distinguished even in binary output.

Note that there is no space between this option and its argument.

-te mod

Append mod to the trace exclude list, so that it will not be reported by the trace option (-o*t*). Any ray striking an object having mod as its modifier will not be reported to the standard output with the rest of the rays being traced. This option has no effect unless either the ’t’ or ’T’ option has been given as part of the output specifier. Any number of excluded modifiers may be given, but each must appear in a separate option.

-ti mod

Add mod to the trace include list, so that it will be reported by the trace option. The program can use either an include list or an exclude list, but not both.

-tE file

Same as -te, except read modifiers to be excluded from file. The RAYPATH environment variable determines which directories are searched for this file. The modifier names are separated by white space in the file.

-tI file

Same as -ti, except read modifiers to be included from file.

-i

Boolean switch to compute irradiance rather than radiance values. This only affects the final result, substituting a Lambertian surface and multiplying the radiance by pi. Glass and other transparent surfaces are ignored during this stage. Light sources still appear with their original radiance values, though the -dv option (below) may be used to override this. This option is especially useful in conjunction with ximage(1) for computing illuminance at scene points.

-u

Boolean switch to control uncorrelated random sampling. When "off", a low-discrepancy sequence is used, which reduces variance but can result in a brushed appearance in specular highlights. When "on", pure Monte Carlo sampling is used in all calculations.

-I

Boolean switch to compute irradiance rather than radiance, with the input origin and direction interpreted instead as measurement point and orientation.

-h

Boolean switch for information header on output.

-x res

Set the x resolution to res. The output will be flushed after every res input rays if -y is set to zero. A value of one means that every ray will be flushed, whatever the setting of -y. A value of zero means that no output flushing will take place.

-y res

Set the y resolution to res. The program will exit after res scanlines have been processed, where a scanline is the number of rays given by the -x option, or 1 if -x is zero. A value of zero means the program will not halt until the end of file is reached.

If both -x and -y options are given, a resolution string is printed at the beginning of the output. This is mostly useful for recovering image dimensions with pvalue(1), and for creating valid Radiance picture files using the color output format. (See the -f option, above.)

-n nproc

Execute in parallel on nproc local processes. This option is incompatible with the -P and -PP, options. Multiple processes also do not work properly with ray tree output using any of the -o*t* options. There is no benefit from specifying more processes than there are cores available on the system or the -x setting, which forces a wait at each flush.

-dj frac

Set the direct jittering to frac. A value of zero samples each source at specific sample points (see the -ds option below), giving a smoother but somewhat less accurate rendering. A positive value causes rays to be distributed over each source sample according to its size, resulting in more accurate penumbras. This option should never be greater than 1, and may even cause problems (such as speckle) when the value is smaller. A warning about aiming failure will issued if frac is too large.

-ds frac

Set the direct sampling ratio to frac. A light source will be subdivided until the width of each sample area divided by the distance to the illuminated point is below this ratio. This assures accuracy in regions close to large area sources at a slight computational expense. A value of zero turns source subdivision off, sending at most one shadow ray to each light source.

-dt frac

Set the direct threshold to frac. Shadow testing will stop when the potential contribution of at least the next and at most all remaining light sources is less than this fraction of the accumulated value. (See the -dc option below.) The remaining light source contributions are approximated statistically. A value of zero means that all light sources will be tested for shadow.

-dc frac

Set the direct certainty to frac. A value of one guarantees that the absolute accuracy of the direct calculation will be equal to or better than that given in the -dt specification. A value of zero only insures that all shadow lines resulting in a contrast change greater than the -dt specification will be calculated.

-dr N

Set the number of relays for secondary sources to N. A value of 0 means that secondary sources will be ignored. A value of 1 means that sources will be made into first generation secondary sources; a value of 2 means that first generation secondary sources will also be made into second generation secondary sources, and so on.

-dp D

Set the secondary source presampling density to D. This is the number of samples per steradian that will be used to determine ahead of time whether or not it is worth following shadow rays through all the reflections and/or transmissions associated with a secondary source path. A value of 0 means that the full secondary source path will always be tested for shadows if it is tested at all.

-dv

Boolean switch for light source visibility. With this switch off, sources will be black when viewed directly although they will still participate in the direct calculation. This option is mostly for the program mkillum(1) to avoid inappropriate counting of light sources, but it may also be desirable in conjunction with the -i option.

-ss samp

Set the specular sampling to samp. For values less than 1, this is the degree to which the highlights are sampled for rough specular materials. A value greater than one causes multiple ray samples to be sent to reduce noise at a commmesurate cost. A value of zero means that no jittering will take place, and all reflections will appear sharp even when they should be diffuse.

-st frac

Set the specular sampling threshold to frac. This is the minimum fraction of reflection or transmission, under which no specular sampling is performed. A value of zero means that highlights will always be sampled by tracing reflected or transmitted rays. A value of one means that specular sampling is never used. Highlights from light sources will always be correct, but reflections from other surfaces will be approximated using an ambient value. A sampling threshold between zero and one offers a compromise between image accuracy and rendering time.

-bv

Boolean switch for back face visibility. With this switch off, back faces of all objects will be invisible to view rays. This is dangerous unless the model was constructed such that all surface normals face outward. Although turning off back face visibility does not save much computation time under most circumstances, it may be useful as a tool for scene debugging, or for seeing through one-sided walls from the outside.

-av red grn blu

Set the ambient value to a radiance of red grn blu . This is the final value used in place of an indirect light calculation. If the number of ambient bounces is one or greater and the ambient value weight is non-zero (see -aw and -ab below), this value may be modified by the computed indirect values to improve overall accuracy.

-aw N

Set the relative weight of the ambient value given with the -av option to N. As new indirect irradiances are computed, they will modify the default ambient value in a moving average, with the specified weight assigned to the initial value given on the command and all other weights set to 1. If a value of 0 is given with this option, then the initial ambient value is never modified. This is the safest value for scenes with large differences in indirect contributions, such as when both indoor and outdoor (daylight) areas are visible.

-ab N

Set the number of ambient bounces to N. This is the maximum number of diffuse bounces computed by the indirect calculation. A value of zero implies no indirect calculation.

This value defaults to 1 in photon mapping mode (see -ap below), implying that global photon irradiance is always computed via one ambient bounce; this behaviour applies to any positive number of ambient bounces, regardless of the actual value specified. A negative value enables a preview mode that directly visualises the irradiance from the global photon map without any ambient bounces.

-ar res

Set the ambient resolution to res. This number will determine the maximum density of ambient values used in interpolation. Error will start to increase on surfaces spaced closer than the scene size divided by the ambient resolution. The maximum ambient value density is the scene size times the ambient accuracy (see the -aa option below) divided by the ambient resolution. The scene size can be determined using getinfo(1) with the -d option on the input octree.

-aa acc

Set the ambient accuracy to acc. This value will approximately equal the error from indirect illuminance interpolation. A value of zero implies no interpolation.

-ad N

Set the number of ambient divisions to N. The error in the Monte Carlo calculation of indirect illuminance will be inversely proportional to the square root of this number. A value of zero implies no indirect calculation.

-as N

Set the number of ambient super-samples to N. Super-samples are applied only to the ambient divisions which show a significant change.

-af fname

Set the ambient file to fname. This is where indirect illuminance will be stored and retrieved. Normally, indirect illuminance values are kept in memory and lost when the program finishes or dies. By using a file, different invocations can share illuminance values, saving time in the computation. The ambient file is in a machine-independent binary format which can be examined with lookamb(1).

The ambient file may also be used as a means of communication and data sharing between simultaneously executing processes. The same file may be used by multiple processes, possibly running on different machines and accessing the file via the network (ie. nfs(4)). The network lock manager lockd(8) is used to insure that this information is used consistently.

If any calculation parameters are changed or the scene is modified, the old ambient file should be removed so that the calculation can start over from scratch. For convenience, the original ambient parameters are listed in the header of the ambient file. Getinfo(1) may be used to print out this information.

-ae mod

Append mod to the ambient exclude list, so that it will not be considered during the indirect calculation. This is a hack for speeding the indirect computation by ignoring certain objects. Any object having mod as its modifier will get the default ambient level rather than a calculated value. Any number of excluded modifiers may be given, but each must appear in a separate option.

-ai mod

Add mod to the ambient include list, so that it will be considered during the indirect calculation. The program can use either an include list or an exclude list, but not both.

-aE file

Same as -ae, except read modifiers to be excluded from file. The RAYPATH environment variable determines which directories are searched for this file. The modifier names are separated by white space in the file.

-aI file

Same as -ai, except read modifiers to be included from file.

-ap file [bwidth1 [bwidth2]]

Enable photon mapping mode. Loads a photon map generated with mkpmap(1) from file, and evaluates the indirect irradiance depending on the photon type (automagically detected) using density estimates with a bandwidth of bwidth1 photons, or the default bandwidth if none is specified (a warning will be issued in this case).

Global photon irradiance is evaluated as part of the ambient calculation (see -ab above), caustic photon irradiance is evaluated at primary rays, and indirect inscattering in mist is accounted for by volume photons. Contribution photons are treated as global photons by rtrace.

Additionally specifying bwidth2 enables bias compensation for the density estimates with a minimum and maximum bandwidth of bwidth1 and bwidth2, respectively.

Global photon irradiance may be optionally precomputed by mkpmap(1), in which case the bandwidth, if specified, is ignored, as the nearest photon is invariably looked up.

Using direct photons replaces the direct calculation with density estimates for debugging and validation of photon emission.

-am frac

Maximum search radius for photon map lookups. Without this option, an initial maximum search radius is estimated for each photon map from the average photon distance to the distribution’s centre of gravity. It is then adapted to the photon density in subsequent lookups. This option imposes a global fixed maximum search radius for all photon maps, thus defeating the automatic adaptation. It is useful when multiple warnings about short photon lookups are issued. Note that this option does not conflict with the bandwidth specified with the -ap option; the number of photons found will not exceed the latter, but may be lower if the maximum search radius contains fewer photons, thus resulting in short lookups. Setting this radius too large, on the other hand, may degrade performance.

-ac pagesize

Set the photon cache page size when using out-of-core photon mapping. The photon cache reduces disk I/O incurred by on-demand loading (paging) of photons, and thus increases performance. This is expressed as a (float) multiple of the density estimate bandwidth specified with -ap under the assumption that photon lookups are local to a cache page. Cache performance is sensitive to this parameter: larger pagesizes will reduce the paging frequency at the expense of higher latency when paging does occur. Sensible values are in the range 4 (default) to 16.

-aC cachesize

Set the total number of photons cached when using out-of-core photon mapping, taking into account the pagesize specified by -ac. Note that this is approximate as the number of cache pages is rounded to the nearest prime. This allows adapting the cache to the available physical memory. In conjunction with the -n option, this is the cache size per parallel process. Cache performance is less sensitive to this parameter, and reasonable performance can obtained with as few as 10k photons. The default is 1M. This option recognises multiplier suffixes (k = 1e3, M = 1e6), both in upper and lower case.

-me rext gext bext

Set the global medium extinction coefficient to the indicated color, in units of 1/distance (distance in world coordinates). Light will be scattered or absorbed over distance according to this value. The ratio of scattering to total scattering plus absorption is set by the albedo parameter, described below.

-ma ralb galb balb

Set the global medium albedo to the given value between 0 0 0 and 1 1 1. A zero value means that all light not transmitted by the medium is absorbed. A unitary value means that all light not transmitted by the medium is scattered in some new direction. The isotropy of scattering is determined by the Heyney-Greenstein parameter, described below.

-mg gecc

Set the medium Heyney-Greenstein eccentricity parameter to gecc. This parameter determines how strongly scattering favors the forward direction. A value of 0 indicates perfectly isotropic scattering. As this parameter approaches 1, scattering tends to prefer the forward direction.

-ms sampdist

Set the medium sampling distance to sampdist, in world coordinate units. During source scattering, this will be the average distance between adjacent samples. A value of 0 means that only one sample will be taken per light source within a given scattering volume.

-lr N

Limit reflections to a maximum of N, if N is a positive integer. If N is zero or negative, then Russian roulette is used for ray termination, and the -lw setting (below) must be positive. If N is a negative integer, then this limits the maximum number of reflections even with Russian roulette. In scenes with dielectrics and total internal reflection, a setting of 0 (no limit) may cause a stack overflow.

-lw frac

Limit the weight of each ray to a minimum of frac. During ray-tracing, a record is kept of the estimated contribution (weight) a ray would have in the image. If this weight is less than the specified minimum and the -lr setting (above) is positive, the ray is not traced. Otherwise, Russian roulette is used to continue rays with a probability equal to the ray weight divided by the given frac.

-ld

Boolean switch to limit ray distance. If this option is set, then rays will only be traced as far as the magnitude of each direction vector. Otherwise, vector magnitude is ignored and rays are traced to infinity.

-e efile

Send error messages and progress reports to efile instead of the standard error.

-w

Boolean switch to suppress warning messages.

-P pfile

Execute in a persistent mode, using pfile as the control file. Persistent execution means that after reaching end-of-file on its input, rtrace will fork a child process that will wait for another rtrace command with the same -P option to attach to it. (Note that since the rest of the command line options will be those of the original invocation, it is not necessary to give any arguments besides -P for subsequent calls.) Killing the process is achieved with the kill(1) command. (The process ID in the first line of pfile may be used to identify the waiting rtrace process.) This option may be used with the -fr option of pinterp(1) to avoid the cost of starting up rtrace many times.

-PP pfile

Execute in continuous-forking persistent mode, using pfile as the control file. The difference between this option and the -P option described above is the creation of multiple duplicate processes to handle any number of attaches. This provides a simple and reliable mechanism of memory sharing on most multiprocessing platforms, since the fork(2) system call will share memory on a copy-on-write basis.

NOTES

Photons are generally surface bound (an exception are volume photons), thus the ambient irradiance in photon mapping mode will be biased at positions which do not lie on a surface.

EXAMPLES

To compute radiance values for the rays listed in samples.inp:

rtrace -ov scene.oct < samples.inp > radiance.out

To compute illuminance values at locations selected with the ’t’ command of ximage(1):

ximage scene.hdr | rtrace -h -x 1 -i scene.oct | rcalc -e ’$1=47.4*$1+120*$2+11.6*$3’

To record the object identifier corresponding to each pixel in an image:

vwrays -fd scene.hdr | rtrace -fda ‘vwrays -d scene.hdr‘ -os scene.oct

To compute an image with an unusual view mapping:

cnt 480 640 | rcalc -e ’xr:640;yr:480’ -f unusual_view.cal | rtrace -x 640 -y 480 -fac scene.oct > unusual.hdr

To compute ambient illuminance in photon mapping mode from a global photon map global.pm via one ambient bounce, and from a caustic photon map caustic.pm at sensor positions in samples.inp:

rtrace -h -ov -ab 1 -ap global.pm 50 -ap caustic.pm 50 scene.oct < samples.inp > illum.out

ENVIRONMENT

RAYPATH

the directories to check for auxiliary files.

FILES

/tmp/rtXXXXXX

common header information for picture sequence

DIAGNOSTICS

If the program terminates from an input related error, the exit status will be 1. A system related error results in an exit status of 2. If the program receives a signal that is caught, it will exit with a status of 3. In each case, an error message will be printed to the standard error, or to the file designated by the -e option.

AUTHOR

Greg Ward

SEE ALSO

getinfo(1), lookamb(1), mkpmap(1), oconv(1), pfilt(1), pinterp(1), pvalue(1), rcontrib(1), rsplit(1), rpict(1), rtpict(1), rvu(1), vwrays(1), ximage(1)