Given a triangle mesh and a set of points, this library supports:
sdf(points)
sdf.contains(points)
sdf.nn(points)
All operations are CPU-only and parallelized.Install python binding: pip install pysdf
from pysdf import SDF
# Load some mesh (don't necessarily need trimesh)
import trimesh
o = trimesh.load('some.obj')
f = SDF(o.vertices, o.faces); # (num_vertices, 3) and (num_faces, 3)
# Compute some SDF values (negative outside);
# takes a (num_points, 3) array, converts automatically
origin_sdf = f([0, 0, 0])
sdf_multi_point = f([[0, 0, 0],[1,1,1],[0.1,0.2,0.2]])
# Contains check
origin_contained = f.contains([0, 0, 0])
# Misc: nearest neighbor
origin_nn = f.nn([0, 0, 0])
# Misc: uniform surface point sampling
random_surface_points = f.sample_surface(10000)
# Misc: surface area
the_surface_area = f.surface_area
# All the functions also support an additional argument 'n_threads=<int>' to specify number of threads.
# by default we use min(32, n_cpus)
To modify the vertices/faces, you can change
f.vertices_mutable
and f.faces_mutable
, then call f.update()
to
update the internal data structures.
You can also use
f.vertices
and f.faces
to access vertices and faces (non-writable).
<img src="https://github.com/sxyu/sdf/blob/master/readme-img/human.gif" width="400">
Robustness under self-intersections:
<img src="https://github.com/sxyu/sdf/blob/master/readme-img/smpl.png" width="400">
Reasonable result for non-watertight mesh with multiple parts:
<img src="https://github.com/sxyu/sdf/blob/master/readme-img/teapot.gif" width="400">
Reasonable result for voxel grid
<img src="https://github.com/sxyu/sdf/blob/master/readme-img/voxel.png" width="400">
sdf::SDF sdf(verts, faces); // verts (n, 3) float, faces (m, 3) float
// SDF. points (k, 3) float; return (k) float
Eigen::Vector3f sdf_at_points = sdf(points);
// Containment test, equal (but maybe faster) than sdf >= 0.
// points (k, 3) float; return (k) bool
Eigen::Matrix<bool, -1, 1> contains_points = sdf.contains(points);
// Miscellaneous: nearest neighbor. points (k, 3) float; return (k) int
Eigen::VectorXi nn_verts_idxs = sdf.nn(points);
// Miscellaneous: uniformly random points on surface (generates 10000 in this case)
Eigen::Matrix<float, -1, 3> random_surface_points = sdf.sample_surface(10000);
// Surface area
float surface_area = sdf.surface_area
Note SDF is > 0 inside and < 0 outside mesh.
find_package(sdf)
target_link_libraries(your_target sdf::sdf)
By default 'robust' mode is used. sdf::SDF sdf(verts, faces, false)
to disable.
The SDF computation will be slightly faster but may be incorrect if the mesh has self-intersections or incorrect winding (not CCW) on some faces.
See the quickstart section for a usage example.
help(pysdf)
will show more unimportant miscellaneous functions you may want to use (surface normal, area, etc.).
By default, SDF(verts, faces)
will copy the vertices/faces to ensure memory safety,
especially since the arguments may be automatically converted.
Use SDF(verts, faces, copy=False)
to prevent this, if you are sure verts/faces are
of types np.float32/np.uint32 respectively and will not be destroyed before the SDF instance.
In this mode, vertices_mutable
/faces_mutable
are unavailable.
In robust mode (default) we use raytracing (parity count) to check containment. Currently the ray tracing has the same limitation as embree, that is when ray exactly hits an edge the intersection gets double counted, inverting the sign of the distance function. This is theoretically unlikely for random points but can occur either due to floating point error or if points and mesh vertices are both taken from a grid. In practice, we (1) randomize the ray tracing direction and (2) trace 3 rays along different axes and take majority to decrease the likelihood of this occurring.
In non-robust mode we use nearest surface normal to check containment. The contains check (and SDF sign) will be wrong under self-intersection or if normals are incorrectly oriented.
mkdir build && cd build && cmake .. && make -j4 && sudo make install
A demo program can optionally be built, if meshview is installed.
To use it, run ./sdf-demo BASIC_OBJ_FILE
. Try the sample-obj/*.obj
included in the project.
All benchmarks are ran on a 6-core CPU (Intel i7 8th generation, high-performance laptop). More is better.
Model vertices | trimesh contains eval/s (numpy) | trimesh contains eval/s (pyembree) | our SDF evals / s (robust) | our SDF evals / s (non-robust) |
---|---|---|---|---|
3241 | 29,555 | 237,855 | 5,077,725 | 8,187,117 |
49246 | 6,835 | 62,058 | 2,971,137 | 4,407,045 |
179282 | 1,301 | 20,157 | 1,672,859 | 1,987,869 |
Here we compare to https://github.com/JiangWenPL/multiperson/tree/master/sdf. The GPU code is ran on a single GTX 1080 Ti, and CPU is a 6-core i7 5820K. I evaluate the SDF on an x-by-x-by-x grid in [-1,1]^3.
Results for SMPL model (13776 faces, 6890 vertices)
Grid resolution | multiperson SDF runtime, ms | our runtime, ms (robust) | our runtime, ms (non-robust) | speedup (robust) |
---|---|---|---|---|
32 | 46.70460891723633 | 13.006210327148438 | 7.317066192626953 | 3.59 |
64 | 236.6414031982422 | 62.57128715515137 | 51.19466781616211 | 3.78 |
128 | 1521.0322265625 | 400.36678314208984 | 347.3823070526123 | 3.80 |
Results for SMPL-X model (20908 faces, 10475 vertices).
Grid resolution | multiperson SDF runtime, ms | our runtime, ms (robust) | our runtime, ms (non-robust) | speedup (robust) |
---|---|---|---|---|
32 | 71.34893035888672 | 13.09061050415039 | 8.291006088256836 | 5.45 |
64 | 353.7056579589844 | 66.21336936950684 | 57.36279487609863 | 5.34 |
128 | 2303.649658203125 | 477.12063789367676 | 396.78120613098145 | 4.83 |
Notes:
BSD 2-clause
This library relies on the Eigen (MPL2) nanoflann (BSD) and RTree (MIT) libraries.