This repository contains the author's implementation of "Robust Fitting of Parallax-Aware Mixtures for Path Guiding". It is implemented as a plugin for the Mitsuba renderer. If you have any questions, do not hesitate to ask Lukas Ruppert lukas.ruppert@uni-tuebingen.de and/or Sebastian Herholz sebastian.herholz@gmail.com.
We merged commit cfeb7766e7a1513492451f35dc65b86409655a7b
from the official Mitsuba repository which fixes the interpolation of spectral color values.
This will change the appearance of scenes defined using spectral colors.
When comparing against this code please apply the patch to your code base and update your reference images!
Make sure to clone the repository with the --recurse-submodules
option, to also clone the vectorclass submodule.
If you forgot the --recurse-submodules
flag, you can use git submodule update --init --recursive
to clone the submodule afterwards.
For compilation, have a look at the Mitsuba documentation, but note that the documentation is a bit outdated and some package names have changed.
Also note that we replaced GLEW-mx with GLEW, since GLEW-mx is no longer maintained.
If you're running Ubuntu, you can install the required prerequisites using install_prerequisites_ubuntu.sh
.
With the prerequisites installed, the code can be compiled on Linux using SCons: (append -jX
for parallel compilation, e.g. -j8
)
scons --cfg=build/config-linux-gcc.py
We have merged and extended the patch for Python 3 compatibility, so that recent versions of SCons should work as well. Let us know if any changes to the configuration files are necessary for other operating systems.
We have so far tested compilation on Ubuntu 18.04, 20.04, and openSUSE Tumbleweed.
If you have issues compiling the GUI, and are sure that all prerequisites are installed, check the configuration for the Qt5 module names in data/scons/qt5.py
.
In line 449, we added .replace('Qt','Qt5')
, to replace the Qt prefix with Qt5, which appears to be the default on modern Linux distributions.
To simplify compilation on modern systems, we have also replaced GLEW-mx with GLEW.
To run Mitsuba, you can either use the GUI mtsgui
or the command-line version mitsuba
you find in the dist
folder after the compilation has finished.
For both of them, you need to add the dist
folder to the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
before running them or they will not be able to load their plugins.
The simplest way to do this is using the setpath.sh
script:
source setpath.sh
./dist/mtsgui
To reproduce the paper's main results shown in Figure 8 and Table 3, you can simply run the provided script reproduce_results.sh
.
On a fresh installation of Ubuntu 20.04, you can first run install_prerequisites_ubuntu.sh
and then compile.sh
to compile Mitsuba.
Other operating systems should work as well, but you will have to install the necessary dependencies yourself.
Reproducing the results on similar hardware should take about 4-5 hours. Each of the reproduced experiments was originally run for 10 minutes and are now configured for a set amount of samples for hardware-independent reproduction. On a 8-Core desktop CPU you're looking at about 12 hours total.
Note that we cleaned up the code and made some small optimizations. The code should now run slightly faster than the reported numbers when run on the same hardware. Our reference hardware is using dual Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 5115 CPUs @ 2.40GHz (40 threads).
The resulting images will be stored in each scene's folder,
result tables will be created as table3.csv
and figure8.csv
.
Speedup can be computed as relMSE of the baseline / relMSE of the result.
For Table 3, the baseline is Practical Path Guiding, configured as follows:
option | setting |
---|---|
nee | never |
sppPerPass | 4 |
spatialFilter | stochastic |
directionalFilter | box |
sTreeThreshold | 4000 |
sampleCombination | automatic |
bsdfSamplingFractionLoss | none |
For Figure 8 it is the simplest guiding method Li.
You can simply select the "Path Guiding" integrator from the mitsuba GUI and set a few parameters that suit your use-case.
You can find a selection of scenes with provided example configurations linked on the project page. You can find more scenes at the Mitsuba website, as well as Benedikt Bitterli's Rendering Resources.
To train and render for a fixed number of samples, you need to set the option training samples to the desired amount and you need to set training time to 0. For setting the samples for rendering, simply set the according value of the used sampler.
When choosing the amount of samples for training, it generally works well to use an equal amount of samples for training and rendering, while often even fewer training samples suffice, especially when using more than 512spp for rendering. You may need to experiment a bit to get the maximum performance as the optimal amount will depend on the scene. You can easily keep track of the training progress in the live preview and choose a suitable number based on your observations.
If you want to train and render for a fixed amount of time, you need to explicitly set the training samples to 0. Then, simply set training time and render time. Additionally, you need to set the samples per pixel in the sampler to 4 or less, as the image will be rendered repeatedly using exactly that sampler configuration. Also be aware, that the code tries to estimate the duration of the following rendering iteration and will terminate early if it decides that the following iteration will exceed the time budget. We do this to play fair in equal-time comparisons. To do your part for a fair comparison, please choose a lower amount of samples per pixel if the iterations take too long and the code terminates too early as a result of that.
The number of samples per training iteration can be controlled by the parameter samples per iteration. You will find that even at 1 sample per pixel, the light transport in a scene can be learned reliably and in some cases even faster. Via a hidden option (see below) you can enable exponential training, which doubles the number of samples each iteration.
Torus scene trained with 16spp using 1spp per iteration, rendered with 32spp. On a 8-Core desktop CPU, this takes less than 30 seconds.
When entering floating-point values in the GUI, generally be aware of your locale (e.g., decimal point vs. decimal comma). While numbers are displayed with a decimal point, they are parsed based on your local format. So, when entering floats, click on another property and verify that the number you have entered has been parsed properly.
Whenever you use the guided path tracer, it is advisable to disable Russian roulette, as the guided path tracer often generates low-throughput paths which would be terminated too early.
For more details on the parameters, look at the documentation in the GUI or at the code itself.
There are a few more parameters which are hidden by default to keep the GUI simple.
They control options regarding importing and exporting of guiding data and intermediate states
as well as some options which can be used for visualization and debugging of some internal information.
There is also an implementation of ADRR (no splitting), but please do not use it when comparing with our method.
Finally, options for training in an exponential fashion or without incremental updates are available.
They are intended to simulate the behavior of previous methods and not very practical otherwise.
To enable them in the GUI, simply remove the comment markers in src/mtsgui/resources/docs.xml
.
The guided path tracer is implemented under src/integrators/pathguiding/pathguiding.cpp
and makes heavy use of the code within include/mitsuba/guiding
.
Even though the code currently only supports mixtures using the von Mises-Fisher distribution, it is heavily templated to allow for arbitrary combinations of directional distributions and additional statistics.
A Python API for inspection of exported guiding distributions and sample data is implemented in src/libpython/guiding.cpp
.
Note that the Python API is only compiled if the necessary Boost-Python and Python development packages are installed on your system.
Check the Mitsuba documentation for details.
Although we have tried to keep the modifications to Mitsuba at a minimum, many core files have been modified and extended slightly. You will find these modifications as separate commits in a separate branch. Some of them fixed existing bugs or updated deprecated code to support newer compilers. Most third-party plugins and extensions should still be compatible.
The code is licensed under GNU GPLv3, see LICENSE for details.