Why are GUIDs not globally unique?
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On 13/08/2017 at 05:15, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Why do you need that?
- To track object updates inside the renderer? Seems to be no way using IDs. They are different in Editor or PV modes. There were topics by Frozen Tarzan about this.
- Do you need to make Variation shaders depending on object IDs? If this case there is an option of using the hash of object names in the hierarchy for this purpose. The hash changes if an object is moved from one level to another of the hierarch. However, when objects are created then by default C4D assign new unique names.
It is possible to implement object tags with autogenerated IDs that are saved with them. The tricky part is when the objects are copy-pasted and when objects are removed. This should be resolved in the ideal case. Maybe, using time of creation, intercepting copy-paste events and etc. etc. All of this seems to be a waste of time for such a small task. Easier is to make a button with "Regenerate Unique IDs"
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On 14/08/2017 at 00:36, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Aaron,
Thanks for your reply.
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Yes, tacking objects across different rendering calls and also for animation. Frozen Tarzan was a team member who started doing this a while back.
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No, not for a shader. Hashing the path/names is also no option as object can have the same names. Hashing the path would be vulnerable to changed object order in one single hierarchy. So you would have to track position within hierarchy as well. Again, this is very vulnerable.
I am generating IDs on each render pass for objects that have not been identified already. The problem is, in Cinema 4D most objects that are visible to the renderer do not exist in the "normal" hierarchy but are part of caches or deform caches. For example, if you put a character into a Subdivision Object, none of the original objects will make it to the renderer. They are all marked as control objects. Other than with other control objects, their resulting geometry is not found in their own caches though but in the Subdivsion Object. Unfortunately, the Subdivision Object does not create unique IPs as other generators. So there is no way to identify the created geometry in a persistent way.
To use an object tag (hidden and automatically managed) was one option I was thinking about but using the AddUniqueID() method is easier. This is also usable for objects that are not able to have Tags.
My problem is really to identify objects in some edge cases. So far I have it working for most situations. Even for instances of complete hierarchies. Objects like the Subdivision Object seem to work quite differently and in contrast to what the documentation recommends that third party developers should do.
As for the waste of time: We have render times of a few milliseconds, so each fraction of a second I can save transferring scene data is worth it in our opinion. In the end, the goal is to render the scene live
Thanks for your help.
Martin -
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On 14/08/2017 at 06:16, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Martin, first of all thanks for writing us.
I strongly apologize for getting later than expect to you with reference to uniquely identifying objects in Cinema but it's taking me longer than expected to formulate a comprehensive answer (touching different cases) to prove that it's indeed possible and consistent with how Cinema is internally designed.
I kindly ask you for a little more patience in order to reorder ideas and get back once and (maybe) for all on the topic.
Best, Riccardo
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On 14/08/2017 at 13:06, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Assoc,
Btw, have a look at a problem as in this thread:
https://developers.maxon.net/forum/topic/580/13734_posemorph-tag-always-increases-getdirty-counterWhat is relevant for your case is that in some cases the object generated caches/addresses may change very frequently. Without even any user change. The object IDs may break rapidly.
Yes, using hierarchical name hashing has dissadvantage that names on the same level can be same and object ID change if we move the object up/down through the hierarchy. But good thing is that by default Cinema makes them different
One more idea to think about for you is to assign object IDs with some clever method until certain level (until a generator like subdiv or cloner). And starting from the generator and deeper (when we work with caches and objects that depend on scattering parameters) we may assign depth-first order enumeration for children.
I look after this topic too to get more options for my goals.
Btw, I have a problem. Not very huge however. It's simply impossible to get any object ID in a methodBool NodeData::InitGLImage(BaseMaterial* mat, BaseDocument* doc, BaseThread* th, BaseBitmap* bmp, Int32 doccolorspace, Bool linearworkflow) {}
This method is called to get a texture 256x256 for object color in the viewport. So the custom Variation shaders look the same in the Viewport. And if you look for what objects this material is assigned too then there can be several.
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On 15/08/2017 at 07:43, xxxxxxxx wrote:
funny that this thread is active.. i was just looking for smth like this...
im trying to store an object using a string, to find it again later
obviously the name is not enough, there can be multiple objects with the same name
so is there a possibilty to get an id or index for an object?
GetGUID() gives me a number, but how can i select this object again if i have the GUID?
note: im using this only for real objects (no generators, cache or whatever)
is GUID safe for that?and... if you str(object) you get a number.... 0x.... is this usable or just a memory position?
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On 15/08/2017 at 23:44, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Aaron,
in InitGlImage you don't have an object reference AFAIK. I was briefly looking into that. My conclusion was, I needed to overwrite GLDraw() which is not documented. From what I saw you need to build your own GLSL shaders with some undocumented methods. There are some GL examples in the SDK that can get you a step or two further but ultimately without documentation how GLSL viewport shaders are build by Cinema 4D this needs quite some effort in reverse engineering
Cheers,
Martin -
On 15/08/2017 at 23:48, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Zeorge,
str(object) will give you undefined behavious. It's converting the memory content of the object to a string. Just don't do that!
I would try GetGUID(). I have found cases were objects receive the same GUID (see above) but that seems to be restricted to caches. The method suggested in the SDK is GetMarker(). This will be unique for each object. It will change frequently though. If you need the IDs for only one pass parsing through the scene and have no requirement for them to be persistent, Marker should work fine.
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On 15/08/2017 at 23:52, xxxxxxxx wrote:
BTW: I am assigning IDs to objects in a first parsing pass and build my own cache of IDs for all objects in caches based on their Control Object parent and their IPs. Where this is not possible, I try GUID and where that fails I resort to Marker to differtiate between objects (though, no longer can identify them).
It seems that different generators behave differently. Putting a character in a subdivision objects yields quite different structural results than using ie. Cloners. Using deformers again has a different structure.
And I haven't even started to talk about instances of hierarchies. They pose their own set of challenge that I am about to finish.
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On 15/08/2017 at 23:52, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Thanks Riccardo.
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On 18/08/2017 at 04:25, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Martin, first and foremost thansk for your patience.
This week has been busy not to have been cope with reordering my findings in a short time and I also wanted to extend my research to reduce the "corner case" risk.
Cinema 4D API offers basically two means to uniquely identify objects: BaseObject::GetGUID() and BaseList2D::GetMarker() which respectively access the object's unique ID and object's GeMarker.
The intent of my research has been to demonstrate that GUID(s) is indeed a reliable way to track objects in Cinema across different user interaction scenarios and aided by GeMarker(s) they offer a complete way to track objects uniquely around Cinema.
Scanning a very simple scene and printing the IDs and GeMarkers info belonging to the objects present provides the following table:
=================================================================================================== [ { GeMarker CRC / GetMarkerStampEx } | GetGUID ] [ { 000459316928 / 0014570499 # 07496 } ] TraversalTest01.c4d [ { 003110699520 / 0014622782 # 07807 } | 0x739249CE036A085C ][0]Cube.A : Cube, 5159-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 000611561600 / 0002058671 # 09006 } | 0x4B1F714B50E82730 ][0][C]Cube.A : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 003620385536 / 0063246992 # 13019 } | 0x29738F0DAFFED8E7 ][1]+Sphere.A : Sphere, 5160-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 002984169472 / 0002058671 # 09014 } | 0x51A98A6F2EF6E7EF ][1]+[C]Sphere.A : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 003436609536 / 0002058671 # 09023 } | 0xD1A95C51EE8F50E6 ][1]+[C][D]Sphere.A : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 000174035360 / 0088455968 # 08560 } | 0x05B40FA55FC2F5DF ][2]++Bulge : Bulge, 5129-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 003097937408 / 0063290296 # 13696 } | 0x4EE5F93031C05A1A ][0]Sphere.C : Sphere, 5160-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 002138721536 / 0002058672 # 09030 } | 0x51A98A6F2EF6E7EF ][0][C]Sphere.C : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 003100995840 / 0014593669 # 07682 } | 0x2879AC49124B66C3 ][1]+Cube.C : Cube, 5159-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 000041026420 / 0002058672 # 09039 } | 0x4B1F714B50E82730 ][1]+[C]Cube.C : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 002939917824 / 0014594104 # 07733 } | 0x06B497DDDB536CC5 ][0]Cube.D : Cube, 5159-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 002548005888 / 0002058672 # 09047 } | 0x646E97C2D42A60BE ][0][C]Cube.D : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 001481651072 / 0002058672 # 09085 } | 0xE46E41FC1453D7B7 ][0][C][D]Cube.D : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 000965783296 / 0088388848 # 08324 } | 0x062A5B18C994B055 ][1]+Bend : Bend, 5128-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 004036197120 / 0014594509 # 07747 } | 0x42F618087566F85F ][1]+Cube.E : Cube, 5159-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 001382765824 / 0002058672 # 09055 } | 0x646E97C2D42A60BE ][1]+[C]Cube.E : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 002404496384 / 0002058672 # 09078 } | 0xE46E41FC1453D7B7 ][1]+[C][D]Cube.E : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 002284037888 / 0088342184 # 08167 } | 0x7E14190FED9A5DE4 ][2]++Twist : Twist, 5134-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 001033116672 / 0014594922 # 07761 } | 0x1ACC3DCCC83D6EE4 ][2]++Cube.F : Cube, 5159-0/0/0/0-0/1 [ { 001744077952 / 0002058672 # 09063 } | 0x4B1F714B50E82730 ][2]++[C]Cube.F : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1 [ { 002722147328 / 0002058672 # 09071 } | 0xCB1FA77590919039 ][2]++[C][D]Cube.F : Polygon, 5100-0/0/0/0-1/1
In the table above the info after GUID is as follows: [ n]+++[C][D]<name> : <type name>, <type>-<other status flags>
- [n]: n equals the nesting level in the hierarchy;
- +++: graphical representation of the nesting level;
- [C][D]: C refers to a cache object, D refers to a deform cache object;
- <name>: refers to the object name;
- <type name>: refers to the object's type name;
- <type>: refers to the object type ID;
- <other status flags>: other flags.
In order to validate the GUID and GeMarker generation mechanism and verify how it reacts upon scene modification a few interaction scenarios have been run (in cascade) on a simple test scene with identification data printed at each step.
The test scenes are available here:
ObjectsIdentification_SimpleTests.c4d
[URL-REMOVED]ObjectsIdentification_MographTests.c4d
[URL-REMOVED]ObjectsIdentification_ParticlesTests.c4d
[URL-REMOVED]
The complete logs of the tests run are available here (the MoGraph and CA tests include examples scene took from the Content Browser) :ObjectsIdentification_SimpleTests.txt
[URL-REMOVED]ObjectsIdentification_MographTests.txt
[URL-REMOVED]ObjectsIdentification_ParticlesTests.txt
[URL-REMOVED]ObjectsIdentification_CATests.txt
[URL-REMOVED]
_ NOTE: The value for GeMarker is obtained by computing the CRC32 based on the values returned by GeMarker::GetMemory()._
... bl->GetMarker().GetMemory(data, size); const UInt32 crc32 = ZipFile::CalcCRC32(data, size); markerString = String::FloatToString(Float32(crc32), 12, 0) ...
_ NOTE: The value for the GUID is obtained by using String::HexToString conversion on the returned value from GetGUID. Although the value returned looks like a memory address it is not._
... const UInt64 guid = obj->GetGUID(); const String guidString = String::HexToString(guid); ...
Opening the file TraversalTest_01.c4d leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) (as well as the GetMarkerStampEx value pair(s)) belonging to generators are unique;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are unique;
- all GUID(s) belonging to generators are unique;
- all GUID(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) with equal number of points and polygons are equal but different from their generator's GUID;
- equal GUID(s) belonging to cache objects (sharing same number of points/polygons) are different from the GUID(s) of the deform cache objects (which are equal as well).
Rendering View (Ctrl-R) leads to the following results:
_ NOTE: _During a rendering process only object caches representing the final geometry of the objects are provided in the VolumeData() instance which means the ID data is extracted from the objects actually used by the Renderer.
To retrieve the initial generators it's required to implement a recursive function using BaseObject::GetCacheParent() to iterate up to the parent generator. Objects listed as "CacheP" are the root-cache parent of a cache object.- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) found in the VolumeData instance are equal to those in the source scene;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators (parents of the caches found in the VolumeData) are equal to those in the source scene;
- all GUID(s) belonging to generators and caches (standard and deform) found in the VolumeData instance are equal to those in the source scene;
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Rendering via IRR (Alt-R) leads to the following results:
NOTE: During a rendering process only object caches representing the final geometry of the objects are provided in the VolumeData() instance which means the ID data is extracted from the objects actually used by the Renderer.
_To retrieve the initial generators it's required to implement a recursive function using BaseObject::GetCacheParent() to iterate up to the parent generator. _ Objects listed as "CacheP" are the root-cache parent of a cache object.
IRR clones the active scene to run the interactive rendering in a separate thread and leave Cinema 4D free to interact with the user.- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) found in the VolumeData instance are new and unique;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators (parents of the caches found in the VolumeData) are equal to those in the source scene;
- all GUID(s) belonging to generator and caches (standard and deform) found in the VolumeData instance are equal to those in the source scene;
Rendering in PV (Ctrl-R) leads to the following results:
_ NOTE: During a rendering process only object caches representing the final geometry of the objects are provided in the VolumeData() instance which means the ID data is extracted from the objects actually used by the Renderer. _
_To retrieve the initial generators it's required to implement a recursive function using BaseObject::GetCacheParent() to iterate up to the parent generator. _ Objects listed as "CacheP" are the root-cache parent of a cache object.
Render to PV clones the active scene to run the rendering in a separate thread and leave Cinema 4D free to interact with the user.- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) found in the VolumeData instance are new and unique;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators (parents of the caches found in the VolumeData) are equal to those in the source scene;
- all GUID(s) belonging to generator and caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
Cloning the scene (via simple Python script) leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to cloned generators are new and unique;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to cloned caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all GUID(s) belonging to cloned generators are new and unique;
- all GUID(s) belonging to cloned caches (standard and deform) with equal number of points and polygons are equal in the cloned scene and are also equal to the corresponding ones in the source scene.
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Copy &pasting active document's objects into a new document leads to the same results brought by Cloning the scene;Swapping from cloned scene to source scene leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are new and unique (because caches are regenerated during document swapping);
- all GUID(s) belonging to generators are unchanged (even the object affected by the change);
- all GUID(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are unchanged.
- all GUID(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) with equal number of points and polygons are equal.
Changing a parameter affecting geometry representation (Fillet "ON" in Cube.C) leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- GeMarker(s) belonging to unmodified caches (standard and deform) are unchanged;
- GeMarker(s) belonging to modified caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all the GUID(s) belonging to generators are unchanged (even the object affected by the change);
- GUID(s) belonging to unmodified caches (standard and deform) are unchanged;
- all GUID(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) with equal number of points and polygons are equal;
- GUID(s) belonging to modified caches (standard and deform) are new and unique.
Undoing the parameter change affecting geometry representation leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- GeMarker(s) belonging to unmodified caches (standard and deform) are unchanged;
- GeMarker(s) belonging to modified caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all the GUID(s) belonging to generators are unchanged (even the object affected by the change);
- GUID(s) belonging to unmodified caches (standard and deform) are unchanged;
- GUID(s) belonging to modified caches (standard and deform) are new and unique.
Saving the scene (overwriting existing file) leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) are unchanged;
- all GUID(s) are unchanged;
- Closing Cinema 4D and opening the overwritten scene leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all the GUID(s) belonging to generators and caches (standard and deform) are unchanged.
Saving the scene to a new file leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) are unchanged;
- all GUID(s) are unchanged;
Closing Cinema 4D and opening the new saved scene leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all the GUID(s) belonging to generators and caches (standard and deform) are unchanged.
Re-opening the initial scene leads to the following results:
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to generators are unchanged;
- all GeMarker(s) belonging to caches (standard and deform) are new and unique;
- all the GUID(s) belonging to generators and caches (standard and deform) are unchanged.
In the end:
- Using GUID(s) to identify objects across multiple scenes in Cinema 4D has proven to be efficient and effective. It should be noted that the tracking should not occur on cache level (where multiple objects can share the same GUID) but on generator level. All the tests conducted so far have shown no corner case where GUID(s) are failing.
- When rendering instead is taken into consideration, GeMarker(s) are the way to go since GeMarker was designed exactly to identify Cinema4D objects in a non GUI context. A few distinctions should take place depending on the different rendering scenarios:
* if rendering is delivered in viewport ("Render View" / Ctrl-R) the scene is not cloned and all the GUID(s)/GeMarker(s) found in the VolumeData are exactly matching those used in the "source" scene;
* if rendering is delivered via IRR ("Interactive Region Render" / Alt-R) the scene is cloned and whilst GeMarker(s) for cache are regenerated, all GUID(s) and GeMarker(s) for generators are retained;
* if rendering is delivered via PV ("Render to Picture Viewer" / Shift-R) the scene is cloned and only GeMarker(s) for generators are retained. It should be also noted that GUID(s) and GeMarker(s) used in the rendering cloned scene are consistent across time which means that a particle or a mograph instance created in a specific frame retains the ID (both GUID and GeMarker) assigned for the whole lifespan of the item. - It's recommended, in the end, to rely on GUID(s) to identify objects whilst, when rendering takes place, it's recommended to use GeMarker(s) which has proven to be the only way to uniquely identify objects across both the "source scene" and the actually data used in rendering process.
Looking forward your thought or comments (or even better corner case), give best.
Riccardo
[URL-REMOVED] @maxon: This section contained a non-resolving link which has been removed.
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On 18/08/2017 at 05:30, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Wow, thanks Riccardo! Please pin this topic somewhere.
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On 18/08/2017 at 06:23, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Actually the plan is to add the info to the SDK docs.
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On 18/08/2017 at 06:49, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Hi Riccardo,
thank you for your extensive research.
Unfortunately, your findings confirm my own research:
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GUIDs are not unique as duplicated of the same GUID can appear in caches
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GeMarker change when the generator updates objects. Thus loosing tracking between different render calls
Objects that are repesented in the scene work fine. Unfortunately, a typical Cinema 4D scene's geometry that needs to be rendered is mostly found in caches and deform caches. Generators and deformers cannot be rendered directly.
The generated geometry cannot be reliably tracked/identified. Identical GUIDs are used for different objects in caches. GeMarker change when the geometry is changed.
Generators should make use of unique IPs so that objects can be reliably tracked across different frames. Unfortunately, for example the Subdivsion Object does not generate IPs for its generated objects in the Cache. Putting a hierarchy of objects into a Subdivision object has two results: all objects are marked as control object. Control objects themselves indicate that they are not to be used directly but that they generate the data that should be used. Typically, this data is found in the cache of the object itself. The Subdivision Object exhibits different behaviour. All the generated geometry is put in it's own cache, regardless where the control object for that geometry. This way, there is no reliable way to deduct the control object that originally was responsible for creating the data.
The problem I have is not getting to the actual geometry to render but to keep track of which object generated what and to only update the changes. With rendering times of a few milliseconds it ridiculous to spend dozens of secoonds or even a few minutes to prepare the frame.
In conclusion: Ultimately, GUIDs and GeMarker can be used to differentiate between objects. Identification is not possible though. Also, UniqueIPs - a proposed method to track/identify genearated objects during animation - is not consistenly used by generators.
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The same GUID is used for different objects in caches. Visible geometry for many scenes can be found exclusively in caches.
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GeMarker changes when the geometry for generated objects change, making it impossible to identify the object between two consecutive renderings.
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Cloning documents changes GeMarkers. Cloning is happening frequently when rendering.
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The proposed mmethod to track generated object by using their UniqueIP fails as generators like the Subdivision Object does not assign UniqueIPs
BTW: I need to identify objects not only between consecutive renderings but I also track changes "LIVE" to immediately update the realtime rendering. I am not using VolumeData in the VideoPost Plugin for this very reason.
I am using Hierarchy class derived classes to traverse the scene and also handle instances myself.
Here is a scene that is showing some of the duplicate GUID problems and also shows how Subdivision Object is handling caches and UniqueIPs differently: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwFHFNK-2yFAMGpIVkRodDlxbzg/view?usp=sharing
Image of resulting test-rendering here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwFHFNK-2yFAcjFlaGJ1NG5wb28/view?usp=sharing
Edit: Here is my log of the scene: https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwFHFNK-2yFAUVhtU2ZOT21LV1E/view?usp=sharing
For IP I print the cache parent ID and the IP. ID in general is the assigned ID I created. (cached) has a CacheParent is not part of the scene the user sees in the object manager.I am having troubles with identification in this scene mostly due to the nesting of instances and putting everything into a Subdivision Object. One Holder_01 "instance of an instance of an instance" and a couple of Holder_02 objects are eluding my efforts to identify them.
Thanks,
MartinBTW: I am out of the office next week. So I will not be able to respond in a timely fashion.
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On 18/08/2017 at 14:06, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Martin, attach few expression tags and you will get always changing addresses/pointers of objects. Same object remains untouched, but you make a mouse click and it changes and it will report to dirty flags, and most likely to ID assigning staff that you must remove/add things (not just update them slightly). Welcome to Cinema 4D >:E :))
Let's ask Maxon to solve this ID issue and update the API for recent couple of major Cinema versions. -
On 18/08/2017 at 15:56, xxxxxxxx wrote:
i also would like is to be able to identify objects by using an unique object id.
as stated here BaseObject.GetGUID() is not unique (?)
and even if it is, there is no method to get the BaseObject if you just have the GUID.
(is there one?)btw it would be nice if it wouldnt be just an in-memory id,
but would stay the same when quitting the app and reopening the file.ps if you str() an object you get
<c4d.BaseObject object called 'Null/Null' with ID 5140 at 0x1412bd6d0>
is this hex address usable for indentification? -
On 28/08/2017 at 01:31, xxxxxxxx wrote:
I have found that the best way to identify an object that is not in a cache is to use AddUniqueID(). This should be serialized to the file as well. It has been working fine for me.
If you don't care about changed IDs with cloned scenes or re-created objects, you can always use GeMarker().
My problem is that I actually have scenes where ALL visible geometry is exclusively coming from object caches. This is where my approaches start to fall appart. Most of the time I can rely on FindUniqueID() of the CacheParent() and the UniqueIP() to reconstruct a unique identification. Unfortunately, this breaks with ojects like the subdivision surface object who do not assign uniqueIPs and also do not make the generator source objects identifiable.
@zeorge: having the GUID, traversing the document to get the BaseObject should not be that time consuming. Even with several thousand objects.
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On 28/08/2017 at 03:56, xxxxxxxx wrote:
If I may drop some insight here on why GUIDs might not always be unique: It's likely due to the use of crc32. In scenes with many objects, especially many generators used, there will be collisions.
I ended up calculating GUIDs myself, only using UniqueIPs, hasing them with xxHash (https://github.com/Cyan4973/xxHash), fixing some of the obvious shortcomings by adding dummy IPs for generators - or something like that, it's been a while.
Works pretty well for uniqely identifying objects across frames of an animation - unfortunately it's useless for identifying objects across insertions/deletions in the scene.
Originally posted by xxxxxxxx
Actually the plan is to add the info to the SDK docs.
Please add "not using crc32" to said plan.
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On 28/08/2017 at 04:29, xxxxxxxx wrote:
From what I've experienced, the identical GUIDs were not due to hash clashing but actually objects that where generated from the same source object, thus being "identical" to them. Unfortunately, that makes it impossible to identify the generated objects
I also use hashing throughout my parsing and use 64-bit SipHash (https://131002.net/siphash/).
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On 01/09/2017 at 09:44, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Thanks both Yves and Martin for keeping your insights to come.
@fused: actually we internally use CRC64 which make the chance to get GUID collisions really unlikely; the reason because there might be equal GUIDs in the scene is mostly related to how GUIDs are currently generated.
@assoc: to reduce (not to exclude) the chance to avoid GUIDs duplication you can enumerate you objects in the scene by setting their IP (BaseObject::SetUniqueIP()) using something like:const Bool SetObjectsIP(BaseObject *op) { Int32 ipnum = 1; while (op) { if (!SetObjectsIP(op->GetDown())) return false; op->SetUniqueIP(ipnum++); op = op->GetNext(); } return true; }
As I've described in my previous post, we are aware of the fact that caches might end up in sharing the same UID, and we are also aware that unique identification is a pretty relevant topic for interactive rendering purposes. That said I'll try to rise up in the future an internal discussion on the topic to see if and how the desired behavior could be addressed.
Best, Riccardo.
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On 04/09/2017 at 00:13, xxxxxxxx wrote:
Thanks Ricardo.
Yes, using SetUniqueIP() is what I would expect to be used by generators that have several objects in their caches. As I am parsing the scene - not generating objects myself - I have no influence how other generators are handling UniqueIPs.
In this regard, I noticed that the Subdivision object does not use UniqueIPs. So I am having a hard time to identify the generated objects between scene changes because they don't have UniqueIPs. So I was trying to use their GUID as fallback but then noticed that the Subdivision object had objects with the same GUID in its cache as well. The GeMarker unfortunately does not help either as it changes frequently.
So I have this case where all methods of the SDK to identify generated objects in a cache fails.
Thanks,
Martin