Awesome
cuBVH
A CUDA Mesh BVH acceleration toolkit.
Install
pip install git+https://github.com/ashawkey/cubvh
# or locally
git clone --recursive https://github.com/ashawkey/cubvh
cd cubvh
pip install .
It will take several minutes to build the CUDA dependency.
Trouble Shooting
fatal error: eigen/matrix.h: No such file or directory
This is a known issue for torch==2.1.0
and torch==2.1.1
(https://github.com/pytorch/pytorch/issues/112841).
To patch up these two versions, clone this repository, and copy patch/eigen
to your pytorch include directory:
# for example, if you are using anaconda (assume base env)
cp -r patch/eigen ~/anaconda3/lib/python3.9/site-packages/torch/include/pybind11/
fatal error: Eigen/Dense: No such file or directory
Please make sure eigen >= 3.3
is installed.
We have included it as a submodule in this repository, but you can also install it in your system include path.
(For example, ubuntu systems can use sudo apt install libeigen3-dev
.)
Usage
import numpy as np
import trimesh
import torch
import cubvh
### build BVH from mesh
mesh = trimesh.load('example.ply')
# NOTE: you need to normalize the mesh first, since the max distance is hard-coded to 10.
BVH = cubvh.cuBVH(mesh.vertices, mesh.faces) # build with numpy.ndarray/torch.Tensor
### query ray-mesh intersection
rays_o, rays_d = get_ray(pose, intrinsics, H, W) # [N, 3], [N, 3], query with torch.Tensor (cuda)
intersections, face_id, depth = BVH.ray_trace(rays_o, rays_d) # [N, 3], [N,], [N,]
### query unsigned distance
points # [N, 3]
# uvw is the barycentric corrdinates of the closest point on the closest face (None if `return_uvw` is False).
distances, face_id, uvw = BVH.unsigned_distance(points, return_uvw=True) # [N], [N], [N, 3]
### query signed distance (INNER is NEGATIVE!)
# for watertight meshes (default)
distances, face_id, uvw = BVH.signed_distance(points, return_uvw=True, mode='watertight') # [N], [N], [N, 3]
# for non-watertight meshes:
distances, face_id, uvw = BVH.signed_distance(points, return_uvw=True, mode='raystab') # [N], [N], [N, 3]
Example for a mesh normal renderer by ray_trace
:
python test/renderer.py # default, show a dodecahedron
python test/renderer.py --mesh example.ply # show any mesh file
Acknowledgement
- Credits to Thomas Müller's amazing tiny-cuda-nn and instant-ngp!