dd2b4ed83e651ba49cfe2765e8bc8d0a45c00a66
1: Shadow map camera sets ABSOLUTE_RF_INHERIT_VIEWPOINT refernce frame. 2: Light Direction by matrix multiplications replaced with transform3x3 multiplication. 3: I made DebugingHUD functional by adding special draw callback. Former version was simply drawing pale square. 4: I was tempted to make 4 th change but decided to not do it. Instead I put it whith #if VIEW_DEPNDENT_TEXGEN. If you decide you may let it go. When objects are not centered at 0,0,0 coord but in some distant location (for example at surface of earth ellipsoid) shadow texgen suffers from inadequate precision of float matrices. I changed that by premultiplying Texgen matrix (using OSG double matrices) with inverse modelview and applying it later with ModelView identity matrix. This tweak may be appropriate for OverlayNode texgen as well. I left former version because I suspect that this change will make osgShadow::ShadowMap view dependant. Currently texgen matrix remains the same no matter what View displays it. With my change it wuld be different for each view. This touches the subject of View Dependent Shadow Techniques that J-S asked recently."
Welcome to the OpenSceneGraph (OSG).
For up-to-date information on the project, in-depth details on how to
compile and run libraries and examples, see the documentation on the
OpenSceneGraph website:
http://www.openscenegraph.org
For the impatient, read the simplified build notes below.
Robert Osfield.
Project Lead.
29th January 2008.
--
How to build the OpenSceneGraph
===============================
The OpenSceneGraph uses the CMake build system to generate a
platform-specific build environment. CMake reads the CMakeLists.txt
files that you'll find throughout the OpenSceneGraph directories,
checks for installed dependenciesand then generates the appropriate
build system.
If you don't already have CMake installed on your system you can grab
it from http://www.cmake.org, use version 2.4.6 or later. Details on the
OpenSceneGraph's CMake build can be found at:
http://www.openscenegraph.org/projects/osg/wiki/Build/CMake
Under unices (i.e. Linux, IRIX, Solaris, Free-BSD, HP-Ux, AIX, OSX)
use the cmake or ccmake command-line utils, or use the included tiny
configure script that'll run cmake for you. The configure script
simply runs 'cmake . -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release' to ensure that you
get the best performance from your final libraries/applications.
cd OpenSceneGraph
./configure
make
sudo make install
Alternatively, you can create an out-of-source build directory and run
cmake or ccmake from there. The advantage to this approach is that the
temporary files created by CMake won't clutter the OpenSceneGraph
source directory, and also makes it possible to have multiple
independent build targets by creating multiple build directories. In a
directory alongside the OpenSceneGraph use:
mkdir build
cd build
cmake ../OpenSceneGraph -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
make
sudo make install
Under Windows use the GUI tool CMakeSetup to build your VisualStudio
files. The following page on our wiki dedicated to the CMake build
system should help guide you through the process:
http://www.openscenegraph.org/projects/osg/wiki/Support/PlatformSpecifics/VisualStudio
Under OSX you can either use the CMake build system above, or use the
Xcode projects that you will find in the OpenSceneGraph/Xcode
directory.
For further details on compilation, installation and platform-specific
information read "Getting Started" guide:
http://www.openscenegraph.org/projects/osg/wiki/Support/GettingStarted
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