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A toy raytracer written in Rust based on PBRT

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abusch/rustracer

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Rustracer

Rustracer is a toy raytracer written in Rust.

Rust dependency status

Update (27/05/2020): This project is not really developped anymore as I ran out of steam and spare time. I'm doing a little bit of maintainance occasionally, such as updating dependencies, to keep it from bitrotting but I suggest you look at rs_pbrt for a more full-featured port of pbrt.

History

It started as a little playground to play with raytracing concepts that I found on Scratchapixel. I then found out about tray_rust and began refactoring my code to follow its design, but then eventually bought a copy of Physically-Based Ray Tracing and decided to follow the C++ implementation as closely as possible to make it easier to follow along with the book. Consider this a port of PBRTv3 to Rust.

Note: I am very much a beginner in Rust as well as in raytracing and this project is a way for me to learn about both. If the code is ugly or broken, it is very much my fault :) This is not helped by the fact that the C++ implementation is very object-oriented, and doesn't always translate cleanly or idiomatically to Rust... I haven't really paid attention to performance yet, or number of allocations, so both are probably pretty bad :) That being said, feedback is more than welcome!

Related projects

  • tray_rust: if you want to see a good physically-based raytracer in Rust written by someone who knows what they're talking about, you should check this project instead of mine :) It's got some nice features, like distributed rendering, and the code is beautifully written and documented.

  • rs_pbrt: another port of PBRT to Rust.

Examples

More examples can be found in the renders/ directory.

balls

How to build

To run the CLI, run cargo run --release -p rustracer -- scene_file.pbrt.

Currently supported

  • Integrators:
    • Whitted
    • Direct Lighting (with "all" or "one" sampling strategies)
    • Path Tracing (with "uniform" or "spatial" sampling strategies)
    • Normal (for debuging)
    • Ambient Occlusion
  • Shapes:
    • Basic shapes: disc, sphere, cylinder
    • triangle meshes
  • Perspective camera with thin-lens depth-of-field
  • Lights:
    • Point lights
    • distant lights
    • diffuse area lights
    • infinite area light
  • BxDFs:
    • Lambertian
    • perfect specular reflection / transmission
    • microfacet (Oren-Nayar and Torrance-Sparrow models, Beckmann and Trowbridge-Heitz distributions, Smith masking-shadowing function)
  • Materials:
    • Matte
    • Plastic
    • Metal / RoughMetal
    • Glass / RoughGlass
    • Substrate (thin-coated)
    • Translucent
    • Uber
    • Disney (without SSS)
  • Textures (imagemaps, UV, CheckerBoard)
    • imagemap with mipmapping (with trilinear and EWA filtering)
    • UV
    • CheckerBoard
    • Fbm
  • BVH acceleration structure (MIDDLE and SAH splitting strategy)
  • multi-threaded rendering
  • Support for PBRT scene file format (still incomplete)
  • Read textures in PNG, TGA, PFM, HDR or EXR (thanks to openexr-rs)
  • Write images in PNG or EXR
  • Support for PLY meshes (thanks to ply-rs)
  • Bump mapping
  • Memory arena (thanks to light_arena)

TODO

  • More CLI parameters (e.g. output file name, thread numbers)
  • More camera types (orthographic, realistic, environment)
  • More shapes (cone, paraboloid, hyperboloid, NURBs...)
  • More samplers (Halton, Sobol...)
  • More BxDFs and materials
  • Implement subsurface scattering
  • Volumetric rendering
  • More integrators: bidirectional path tracing, MTL, SPPM
  • Animations
  • more light types
  • k-d trees?
  • Spectral rendering?
  • some SIMD optimisation?
  • ...

License

Licensed under either of

at your option.

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