All this USD stuff is new and exciting to us, but we see huge potential. I just need a few tips to keep moving forward.
I'm trying to set all the attributes in a USD for rendering (for redshift, but it doesn't really matter what renderer, I'm just trying to set the default USD parameters without dealing with specific renderer options at this point.)
What is the correct way to set the outputimage attribute without using the Karma specific nodes or the USD rop? I'm not looking to override the outputimage with the usd rop, I'd like to set it properly in the usd composed scene using:
render settings
render product
and rendervars.
I can add it as a path in the renderproduct, but then I'm not sure how to configure the required rendervar node. What do I enter into the source line in the rendervar to pull the generic rgba plane? IS there a list of the generic options here? Like P Z N RGBA….
I'd love a screenshot or a hipfile that shows how to set these GENERIC usd settings without getting into anything karma specific. Just the suggested workflow to set the USD parameters for render paths.
The goal would be to hopefully take the resulting USD and feed it to redshift with a commandline to render on the farm, so it needs to contain everything inside instead of last minute overrides.
Thanks.
Lops and setting 'outputimage'
4587 8 0- michaelblackbourn
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Render Vars are all renderer-specific AFAIK. I'm not sure what the generic rgba plane is. However you can create a render settings prim without any render products. The render settings lets you specify the resolution and camera, and then use the output override path the specify the path.
For renderman and RPR, I got a render var to work for the beauty with these settings:
{
dataType: float4
sourceName:
sourceType: Raw
Name: “color”
Format: half4
}
The source name doesn't seem to matter. This setting doesn't work with Karma, which requires an LPE of C.* to get the beauty.
For renderman and RPR, I got a render var to work for the beauty with these settings:
{
dataType: float4
sourceName:
sourceType: Raw
Name: “color”
Format: half4
}
The source name doesn't seem to matter. This setting doesn't work with Karma, which requires an LPE of C.* to get the beauty.
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Thanks for the info. I've managed to build a .usd that I can render in both redshift and karma targeting different rendersettings lops in the husk commandline. All working well and the rendervar for ‘color’ using C.* and LPE works for both.
So major testing can begin. It's super awesome that this eliminates the ifd job on the farm, and that the usd can be used for all the timesamples.
Not I just need to figure out how to setup all the redshift Z N P and all the other AOV's. And for that I'm off to the Redshift forum. Thanks.
One last thing. I was kind of hoping to also be able to use husk and render GL… but so far thats not working.
So major testing can begin. It's super awesome that this eliminates the ifd job on the farm, and that the usd can be used for all the timesamples.
Not I just need to figure out how to setup all the redshift Z N P and all the other AOV's. And for that I'm off to the Redshift forum. Thanks.
One last thing. I was kind of hoping to also be able to use husk and render GL… but so far thats not working.
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I believe Storm has, in recent USD updates, gained the ability to render to Hydra Render Buffers (rather than rendering directly to the viewport). So it might be posible to get Storm to work with Husk, but as @jsmack says, Houdini GL uses a vastly different approach to rendering that is tied very tightly to the Houdini viewport, and so will always rely on the OpenGL ROP. We might be able to make an HDA that wraps a USD Render and and OpenGL ROP, but I'm not sure how similar their interfaces are, so you might end up with a really ugly parameter interface that changes completely depending on which render delegate you choose…
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Where do you see the renderer options?
Usage: husk [options] usdfile Information: -h [ --help ] Show this help -v [ --version ] Print the renderer version Karma Specific Options: --properties Print all rendering properties and their defaults --property-definitions Print full information about properties --procedurals Print all procedural definitions --filters Print all filters/oracles -p [ --pixel-samples ] arg (=128) Samples per pixel --tile-size arg (=128) Tile size --disable-lighting Disable all lighting --ao-samples arg (=0) Headlight shading: Ambient occlusion samples --ao-distance arg (=1) Headlight shading: Ambient occlusion distance cutoff --lock-random arg (=0) Lock the random number instead of using the render frame --dicingcamera arg Dice from the specified camera. Uses render camera if unspecified. --optimize-offline arg (=0) Offline optimization level - 0 = Disable optimization - 1 = Disable for multi-frame renders - 2 = Force optimization for all renders Offline optimization will apply certain optimizations that are specific to non-interactive workflows. When rendering multiple frames in a single render, these optimizations may impact performance. For single frame renders, they may be significant. USD Options: --usd-input arg The USD file for the scene --list-cameras List all cameras in the USD file --purpose arg (=geometry,render) Specify the purpose for rendering. This is a comma separated list of purposes (from {'geometry', 'guide', 'proxy', 'render'}). --complexity arg (=veryhigh) Specify geometric complexity ({'low', 'medium', 'high', 'veryhigh'}) -s [ --settings ] arg Render using properties defined by node. You can specify a path relative to /Render. Render Settings Overrides: -c [ --camera ] arg Render from the specified camera -o [ --output ] arg Output image. Variables are expanded in the string can be represented in various ways: - $F, $FF $F4: Current frame number - $N: The N'th frame in the sequence - <F>, <FF>, <F4>: Frame (<UDIM> style) - %d, %g, %04d: Frame (printf style) -r [ --res ] arg Image resolution (width and height) --pixel-aspect arg (=1) Pixel aspect ratio Frame Range: -f [ --frame ] arg (=1) The start frame for rendering -n [ --frame-count ] arg (=1) The number of frames to render -i [ --frame-inc ] arg (=1) The frame increment Rendering: -R [ --renderer ] arg Choose an alternate Hydra head -j [ --threads ] arg (=0) Thread count '-j 0' uses all processors '-j 4' uses four processors '-j -1' uses all processors but one. --fast-exit arg (=1) Turn off to force a full tear-down of the USD scene and Hydra. --checkpoint arg (=-1) Checkpoint partial image after this number of seconds. At the current time, checkpointed renders cannot be resumed. --exrmode arg (=1) OpenEXR saving mode: -1 Use HOUDINI_OIIO_EXR variable 0 Classic driver (HOUDINI_OIIO_EXR=0) 1 Improved driver (HOUDINI_OIIO_EXR=1) --timelimit arg (=-1) Limit rendering time to this number of seconds --timelimit-image Time limit applies to images rather than the whole sequence --timelimit-nosave-partial If time limit is exceeded, do not save partial results -V [ --verbose ] arg Render verbosity (e.g. -Va2) 0-9 Verbosity of rendering statistics p Enable VEX profiling (impacts performance) P Enable VEX profiling and NAN checks (severe impact on performance) a/A Turn on/off Alfred style progress t/T Turn on/off message time stamps Note: Sending the husk process a USR1 signal will trigger saving a checkpoint image
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