[1] | 1 | /* |
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| 2 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 3 | This source file is part of OGRE |
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| 4 | (Object-oriented Graphics Rendering Engine) |
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| 5 | For the latest info, see http://www.ogre3d.org/ |
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| 6 | |
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| 7 | Copyright (c) 2006 Torus Knot Software Ltd |
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| 8 | Copyright (c) 2006 Matthias Fink, netAllied GmbH <matthias.fink@web.de> |
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| 9 | Also see acknowledgements in Readme.html |
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| 10 | |
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| 11 | This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under |
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| 12 | the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software |
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| 13 | Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later |
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| 14 | version. |
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| 15 | |
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| 16 | This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT |
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| 17 | ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS |
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| 18 | FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details. |
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| 19 | |
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| 20 | You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with |
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| 21 | this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple |
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| 22 | Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA, or go to |
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| 23 | http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.txt. |
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| 24 | |
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| 25 | You may alternatively use this source under the terms of a specific version of |
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| 26 | the OGRE Unrestricted License provided you have obtained such a license from |
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| 27 | Torus Knot Software Ltd. |
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| 28 | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
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| 29 | */ |
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| 30 | #ifndef __ShadowCameraSetupLiSPSM_H__ |
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| 31 | #define __ShadowCameraSetupLiSPSM_H__ |
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| 32 | |
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| 33 | #include "OgrePrerequisites.h" |
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| 34 | #include "OgreShadowCameraSetupFocused.h" |
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| 35 | |
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| 36 | |
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| 37 | namespace Ogre |
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| 38 | { |
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| 39 | |
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| 40 | /** Implements the Light Space Perspective Shadow Mapping Algorithm. |
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| 41 | @remarks |
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| 42 | Implements the LiSPSM algorithm for an advanced shadow map generation. LiSPSM was |
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| 43 | developed by Michael Wimmer, Daniel Scherzer and Werner Purgathofer of the TU Wien. |
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| 44 | The algorithm was presented on the Eurographics Symposium on Rendering 2004. |
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| 45 | @note |
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| 46 | Shadow mapping was introduced by Williams in 1978. First a depth image is rendered |
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| 47 | from the light's view and compared in a second pass with depth values of the normal |
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| 48 | camera view. In case the depth camera's depth value is greater than the depth seen |
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| 49 | by the light the fragment lies in the shadow. |
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| 50 | The concept has a major draw back named perspective aliasing. The shadow map distri- |
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| 51 | butes the samples uniformly meaning the position of the viewer is ignored. For the |
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| 52 | viewer however the perspective projection affects near objects to be displayed |
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| 53 | bigger than further away objects. The same thing happens with the shadow map texels: |
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| 54 | Near shadows appear very coarse and far away shadows are perfectly sampled. |
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| 55 | In 2002 Stamminger et al. presented an algorithm called Perspective Shadow Maps |
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| 56 | (PSM). PSM battles the perspective aliasing by distributing 50% of the shadow map |
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| 57 | texels for objects in the range of <near clipping plane> to <near clipping plane * 2> |
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| 58 | which inverts the problem: The shadows near the viewer are perfectly sampled, |
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| 59 | however far away shadow may contain aliasing artefacts. A near clipping plane may be |
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| 60 | a problem. But this is not the only one. In the post-perspective space the light |
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| 61 | sources are non-intuitively mapped: Directional lights may become point light and |
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| 62 | point lights may become directional lights. Also light sinks (opposite of a light |
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| 63 | source) may appear. Another problem are shadow casters located behind the viewer. |
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| 64 | In post-projective space objects behind the viewer are mapped in front of him with |
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| 65 | a flipped up-vector. |
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| 66 | LiSPSM battles the light source problem of the post-projective space by rearranging |
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| 67 | the light space before transformation in such a way that no special cases appear. |
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| 68 | This is done by converting point/spot lights into directional lights. The light |
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| 69 | space is arranged in such a way that the light direction equals the inverse UNIT_Y. |
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| 70 | In this combination the directional light will neither change its type nor its |
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| 71 | direction. Furthermore all visible objects and shadow casters affecting the user's |
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| 72 | visible area lie in front of the shadow camera: After building the intersection body |
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| 73 | that contains all these objects (body intersection building was introduced with PSM; |
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| 74 | have a look at the description for the method "calculateB" for further info) a |
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| 75 | frustum around the body's light space bounding box is created. A parameter (called |
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| 76 | 'n') automatically adjusts the shadow map sample distribution by specifying the |
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| 77 | frustum's view point - near plane which affects the perspective warp. In case the |
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| 78 | distance is small the perspecive warp will be strong. As a consequence near objects |
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| 79 | will gain quality. |
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| 80 | However there are still problems. PSM as well as LiSPSM only devote to minimize |
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| 81 | perspective aliasing. Projection aliasing is still a problem, also 'swimming |
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| 82 | artefacts' still occur. The LiSPSM quality distribution is very good but not the |
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| 83 | best available: Some sources say logarithmic shadow mapping is the non plus ultra, |
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| 84 | however others reject this thought. There is a research project on logarithmic shadow |
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| 85 | maps. The web page url is http://gamma.cs.unc.edu/logsm/. However there is no techical |
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| 86 | report available yet (Oct 23rd, 2006). |
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| 87 | @note |
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| 88 | More information can be found on the webpage of the TU Wien: |
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| 89 | http://www.cg.tuwien.ac.at/research/vr/lispsm/ |
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| 90 | @note |
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| 91 | Original implementation by Matthias Fink <matthias.fink@web.de>, 2006. |
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| 92 | */ |
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| 93 | class _OgreExport LiSPSMShadowCameraSetup : public FocusedShadowCameraSetup |
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| 94 | { |
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| 95 | protected: |
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| 96 | /// Warp factor adjustment |
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| 97 | Real mOptAdjustFactor; |
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| 98 | /// Use simple nopt derivation? |
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| 99 | bool mUseSimpleNOpt; |
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| 100 | |
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| 101 | /** Calculates the LiSPSM projection matrix P. |
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| 102 | @remarks |
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| 103 | The LiSPSM projection matrix will be built around the axis aligned bounding box |
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| 104 | of the intersection body B in light space. The distance between the near plane |
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| 105 | and the projection center is chosen in such a way (distance is set by the para- |
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| 106 | meter n) that the perspective error is the same on the near and far plane. In |
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| 107 | case P equals the identity matrix the algorithm falls back to a uniform shadow |
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| 108 | mapping matrix. |
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| 109 | @param lightSpace: matrix of the light space transformation |
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| 110 | @param bodyB: intersection body B |
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| 111 | @param bodyLVS: intersection body LVS (relevant space in front of the camera) |
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| 112 | @param sm: scene manager |
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| 113 | @param cam: currently active camera |
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| 114 | @param light: currently active light |
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| 115 | */ |
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| 116 | Matrix4 calculateLiSPSM(const Matrix4& lightSpace, const PointListBody& bodyB, |
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| 117 | const PointListBody& bodyLVS, const SceneManager& sm, |
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| 118 | const Camera& cam, const Light& light) const; |
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| 119 | |
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| 120 | /** Calculates the distance between camera position and near clipping plane. |
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| 121 | @remarks |
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| 122 | n_opt determines the distance between light space origin (shadow camera position) |
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| 123 | and the near clipping plane to achieve an optimal perspective forshortening effect. |
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| 124 | In this way the texel distibution over the shadow map is controlled. |
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| 125 | |
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| 126 | Formula: |
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| 127 | d |
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| 128 | n_opt = --------------- |
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| 129 | sqrt(z1/z0) - 1 |
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| 130 | |
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| 131 | Parameters: |
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| 132 | d: distance between the near and the far clipping plane |
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| 133 | z0: located on the near clipping plane of the intersection body b |
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| 134 | z1: located on the far clipping plane with the same x/y values as z0 |
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| 135 | @note |
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| 136 | A positive value is applied as the distance between viewer and near clipping plane. |
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| 137 | In case null is returned uniform shadow mapping will be applied. |
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| 138 | @param lightSpace: matrix of the light space transformation |
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| 139 | @param bodyBABB_ls: bounding box of the tranformed (light space) bodyB |
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| 140 | @param bodyLVS: point list of the bodyLVS which describes the scene space which is in |
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| 141 | front of the light and the camera |
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| 142 | @param cam: currently active camera |
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| 143 | */ |
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| 144 | Real calculateNOpt(const Matrix4& lightSpace, const AxisAlignedBox& bodyBABB_ls, |
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| 145 | const PointListBody& bodyLVS, const Camera& cam) const; |
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| 146 | |
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| 147 | /** Calculates a simpler version than the one above. |
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| 148 | */ |
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| 149 | Real calculateNOptSimple(const PointListBody& bodyLVS, |
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| 150 | const Camera& cam) const; |
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| 151 | |
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| 152 | /** Calculates the visible point on the near plane for the n_opt calculation |
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| 153 | @remarks |
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| 154 | z0 lies on the parallel plane to the near plane through e and on the near plane of |
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| 155 | the frustum C (plane z = bodyB_zMax_ls) and on the line x = e.x. |
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| 156 | @param lightSpace: matrix of the light space transformation |
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| 157 | @param e: the LiSPSM parameter e is located near or on the near clipping plane of the |
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| 158 | LiSPSM frustum C |
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| 159 | @param bodyB_zMax_ls: maximum z-value of the light space bodyB bounding box |
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| 160 | @param cam: currently active camera |
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| 161 | */ |
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| 162 | Vector3 calculateZ0_ls(const Matrix4& lightSpace, const Vector3& e, Real bodyB_zMax_ls, |
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| 163 | const Camera& cam) const; |
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| 164 | |
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| 165 | /** Builds a frustum matrix. |
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| 166 | @remarks |
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| 167 | Builds a standard frustum matrix out of the distance infos of the six frustum |
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| 168 | clipping planes. |
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| 169 | */ |
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| 170 | Matrix4 buildFrustumProjection(Real left, Real right, Real bottom, |
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| 171 | Real top, Real near, Real far) const; |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | public: |
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| 174 | /** Default constructor. |
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| 175 | @remarks |
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| 176 | Nothing done here. |
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| 177 | */ |
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| 178 | LiSPSMShadowCameraSetup(void); |
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| 179 | |
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| 180 | /** Default destructor. |
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| 181 | @remarks |
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| 182 | Nothing done here. |
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| 183 | */ |
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| 184 | virtual ~LiSPSMShadowCameraSetup(void); |
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| 185 | |
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| 186 | /** Returns a LiSPSM shadow camera. |
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| 187 | @remarks |
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| 188 | Builds and returns a LiSPSM shadow camera. |
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| 189 | More information can be found on the webpage of the TU Wien: |
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| 190 | http://www.cg.tuwien.ac.at/research/vr/lispsm/ |
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| 191 | */ |
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| 192 | virtual void getShadowCamera(const SceneManager *sm, const Camera *cam, |
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| 193 | const Viewport *vp, const Light *light, Camera *texCam) const; |
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| 194 | |
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| 195 | /** Adjusts the parameter n to produce optimal shadows. |
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| 196 | @remarks |
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| 197 | The smaller the parameter n, the stronger the perspective warping effect. |
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| 198 | The consequence of a stronger warping is that the near shadows will gain |
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| 199 | quality while the far ones will lose it. Depending on your scene and light |
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| 200 | types you may want to tweak this value - for example directional lights |
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| 201 | tend to benefit from higher values of n than other types of light, |
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| 202 | especially if you expect to see more distant shadows (say if the viewpoint is |
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| 203 | higher above the ground plane). Remember that you can supply separate |
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| 204 | ShadowCameraSetup instances configured differently per light if you wish. |
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| 205 | @param n The adjustment factor - default is 0.1f. |
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| 206 | */ |
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| 207 | virtual void setOptimalAdjustFactor(Real n) { mOptAdjustFactor = n; } |
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| 208 | /** Get the parameter n used to produce optimal shadows. |
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| 209 | @see setOptimalAdjustFactor |
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| 210 | */ |
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| 211 | virtual Real getOptimalAdjustFactor() const { return mOptAdjustFactor; } |
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| 212 | /** Sets whether or not to use a slightly simpler version of the |
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| 213 | camera near point derivation (default is true) |
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| 214 | */ |
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| 215 | virtual void setUseSimpleOptimalAdjust(bool s) { mUseSimpleNOpt = s; } |
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| 216 | /** Gets whether or not to use a slightly simpler version of the |
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| 217 | camera near point derivation (default is true) |
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| 218 | */ |
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| 219 | virtual bool getUseSimpleOptimalAdjust() const { return mUseSimpleNOpt; } |
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| 220 | |
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| 221 | }; |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | } |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | #endif |
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| 226 | |
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