Introduction
Mitsuba 3 is a research-oriented rendering system for forward and inverse light
transport simulation developed at EPFL in Switzerland.
It consists of a core library and a set of plugins that implement functionality
ranging from materials and light sources to complete rendering algorithms.
Mitsuba 3 is retargetable: this means that the underlying implementations and
data structures can transform to accomplish various different tasks. For
example, the same code can simulate both scalar (classic one-ray-at-a-time) RGB transport
or differential spectral transport on the GPU. This all builds on
Dr.Jit, a specialized just-in-time
(JIT) compiler developed specifically for this project.
Main Features
-
Cross-platform: Mitsuba 3 has been tested on Linux (x86_64
), macOS
(aarch64
, x86_64
), and Windows (x86_64
).
-
High performance: The underlying Dr.Jit compiler fuses rendering code
into kernels that achieve state-of-the-art performance using
an LLVM backend targeting the CPU and a CUDA/OptiX backend
targeting NVIDIA GPUs with ray tracing hardware acceleration.
-
Python first: Mitsuba 3 is deeply integrated with Python. Materials,
textures, and even full rendering algorithms can be developed in Python,
which the system JIT-compiles (and optionally differentiates) on the fly.
This enables the experimentation needed for research in computer graphics and
other disciplines.
-
Differentiation: Mitsuba 3 is a differentiable renderer, meaning that it
can compute derivatives of the entire simulation with respect to input
parameters such as camera pose, geometry, BSDFs, textures, and volumes. It
implements recent differentiable rendering algorithms developed at EPFL.
-
Spectral & Polarization: Mitsuba 3 can be used as a monochromatic
renderer, RGB-based renderer, or spectral renderer. Each variant can
optionally account for the effects of polarization if desired.
Tutorial videos, documentation
We've recorded several [YouTube videos][10] that provide a gentle introduction
Mitsuba 3 and Dr.Jit. Beyond this you can find complete Juypter notebooks
covering a variety of applications, how-to guides, and reference documentation
on [readthedocs][2].
Installation
We provide pre-compiled binary wheels via PyPI. Installing Mitsuba this way is as simple as running
pip install mitsuba
on the command line. The Python package includes four variants by default:
scalar_spectral
scalar_rgb
llvm_ad_rgb
cuda_ad_rgb
The first two perform classic one-ray-at-a-time simulation using either a RGB
or spectral color representation, while the latter two can be used for inverse
rendering on the CPU or GPU. To access additional variants, you will need to
compile a custom version of Dr.Jit using CMake. Please see the
documentation
for details on this.
Requirements
Python >= 3.8
- (optional) For computation on the GPU:
Nvidia driver >= 495.89
- (optional) For vectorized / parallel computation on the CPU:
LLVM >= 11.1
Usage
Here is a simple "Hello World" example that shows how simple it is to render a
scene using Mitsuba 3 from Python:
import mitsuba as mi
mi.set_variant('scalar_rgb')
scene = mi.load_dict(mi.cornell_box())
img = mi.render(scene)
mi.Bitmap(img).write('cbox.exr')
Tutorials and example notebooks covering a variety of applications can be found
in the [documentation][2].
About
This project was created by Wenzel Jakob.
Significant features and/or improvements to the code were contributed by
Sébastien Speierer,
Nicolas Roussel,
Merlin Nimier-David,
Delio Vicini,
Tizian Zeltner,
Baptiste Nicolet,
Miguel Crespo,
Vincent Leroy, and
Ziyi Zhang.
When using Mitsuba 3 in academic projects, please cite:
@software{Mitsuba3,
title = {Mitsuba 3 renderer},
author = {Wenzel Jakob and Sébastien Speierer and Nicolas Roussel and Merlin Nimier-David and Delio Vicini and Tizian Zeltner and Baptiste Nicolet and Miguel Crespo and Vincent Leroy and Ziyi Zhang},
note = {https://mitsuba-renderer.org},
version = {3.1.1},
year = 2022
}