It is not uncommon for production scenes to rely heavily on geo area lights. In this test we will compare geo light sampling technology in 3Delight OSL, Arnold and RenderMan. We will use a test with a geometric area light that is composed of a relatively large number of faces. The test, although limited, should allow us to find the convergence rate of each algorithm as well as general performance.

The Scene

The test scene allows for procedural generation of floating area lights using the "Tubes Per Step" PaintEffects attribute.


The scene is designed to procedurally generate a number of area lights floating on top of a "city".  

The Renderers



ArnoldRenderMan/RIS3Delight OSL
Version




TechnologyUnidirectional path tracer.Using unidirectional path tracer. Other options are available but not useful for this test.Unidirectional path tracer.
ShadersC++C++OSL

Methodology

We are interested to find out about:

We will start by creating a "ground truth" image for each renderer (encouragingly, images produced by both 3Delight and Arnold are almost exactly the same). This image is generated by using a very large amount of samples so there is no more apparent noise. We will then render several images with varying amount of samples and measure the RMSE between these images and ground truth. Timings and statistics will be collected at each render. Having this data will allow us to draw a conclusion about the convergence rate and general performance.

The Setup

We use a 1x1 pixel sample in all renderers. Adaptivity is disabled as well as all additional bounces. This is done so to isolate the light sampler. In Arnold, the light samples are attributes of the geometry. In RenderMan/RIS the light samples are attributes of a custom shape. In 3Delight, the light attributes are on Maya's area light.


RendererArnoldRenderMan/RIS3Delight
Sampling

Geo Light


Notes

Arnold — For light samples, Arnold uses effective sample counts that are proportional – within a constant –  to the square of the user specified value.  As we will see, this makes  sense from a UI standpoint since the variance follows the inverse of the same rule in the case of Arnold. This makes the light samples slider linear in term of perceived noise. In the Arnold tables below, we will specify the effective samples per pixel along with the user samples.

RenderMan/RIS – In Arnold and 3Delight, light samples are the single "go to" parameter to control image quality when only direct lighting is considered. In RenderMan/RIS, we had to match light sample count with BxDF sample count to achieve acceptable quality and satisfactory convergence rates. Using light samples only – or BxDF samples only –  produced slowly convergent renders.  In RenderMan/RIS result data, "N samples" means N samples for both light and BxDF.   We did all the test with the "advanced (4)" light sampler —  other samplers did not provide acceptable results for this test case. The samples used by the renderer are the ones entered in the UI and are not squared as in Arnold. Note that we used the path tracer with one bounce instead if the "direct lighting" algorithm for one of the images because of a crash (quality and speed did not differ). 

3Delight – We have only one control for the general quality of the render. In the case of direct lighting, 3Delight "understands" that samples are best used for light sampling and that's what it does. As tests will show, those samples have a linear impact on perceived noise levels. 

Results

The following graph gives a good idea on the algorithm sophistication of the different light samplers. 



Rays2.453.134.517.2712.7823.845.8890.1
3Delight0.09331420.06582660.04412480.02904390.01855750.01175660.00752546

0.00449892



Rays0.6783.2610.816.9443.4173.6694.5
Arnold0.156990.1001150.05017870.03963990.02425150.01174130.00693426



Rays1.472.945.8811.721.147.0294.14376.3751.3
RenderMan/RIS0.1511250.1214870.09536490.07281480.05206060.03738760.02653880.01381480.00854045



The following graph shows the time required to achieve a certain quality. From user's perspective, this is an important quantity.

Time5.72s7.6312.1520.6837.7572.07142.05280.68
3Delight0.09331420.06582660.04412480.02904390.01855750.01175660.00752546

0.00449892

Time12692181492
Arnold0.156990.1001150.05017870.03963990.02425150.01174130.00693426
Time6.747.237.999.4218.5129.4098.08383.39
RenderMan/RIS0.1511250.1214870.09536490.07281480.0373876


0.02653880.01381480.00854045
The following graph shows how much time it takes to build the acceleration data structure depending on sample/ray count.

Rays2.453.134.517.2712.7823.845.8890.1
3Delight2222222

2

Rays0.6783.2610.843.4173.6694.5
Arnold00.351.23.21141
Rays1.472.945.8811.747.0294.14376.3751.3
RenderMan33.244.7915.551.297

Arnold

*TTFP = Time to first pixel.

Samples (effective)2 (1.23)4 (4.91)8 (19.64)10 (30)16 (78.56)32 (314.29)64 (1257.18)
Image



Time12692181492
TTFP*00.351.22.03.21141
Shadow Rays0.678 M

3.26 M

10.8 M16.94 M43.4 M173.6 M694.5 M
RMSE0.156990.1001150.05017870.03963990.02425150.01174130.00693426

3Delight

Samples248163264128256
Image

Time (s)5.727.6312.8220.6837.7572.07142.05302.98
TTFP (s)22222222
Shadow Rays2.45 M

3.13 M

4.51 M7.27 M12.78 M23.8 M45.88 M90.1 M
RMSE0.09331420.06582660.04412480.02904390.01855750.01175660.007525460.00449892



RenderMan/RIS


Samples12481632642565121024
Image

Time (s)6.747.237.999.4212.1218.5129.4098.08195.776:23.39
TTFP (s)3.13.244.76.7915.551.2

97



Rays

1.47 M

2.94 M

5.88 M

11.7 M

21.1M47.02 M94.14 M376.3 M751.3 M1499 M
RMSE0.1511250.1214870.09536490.07281480.05206060.03738760.02653880.01381480.008540450.00396



Conclusions

    1. 3Delight Variance ~ 1/x
    2. Arnold Variance ~ 1/sqrt(x)
    3. RenderMan/RIS Variance ~ 1/sqrt(x) (but could be slightly worse, needs more tests)


Resources



RenderMan/RISArnold3Delight
Images and Stats


Maya Scene

Remarks
The same scene works with both 3Delight and Arnold