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John Biddiscombe CSCS Swiss National Supercomputing Centre

Working with Time in ParaView. John Biddiscombe CSCS Swiss National Supercomputing Centre. Contents. Data Formats for time-dependent data Overview of GUI controls Animation Controls Connection between GUI and internals Comparative Visualization mode Temporal Pipeline Overview

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John Biddiscombe CSCS Swiss National Supercomputing Centre

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  1. 03/06/2008 Working with Time in ParaView John Biddiscombe CSCS Swiss National Supercomputing Centre

  2. Contents Data Formats for time-dependent data Overview of GUI controls Animation Controls Connection between GUI and internals Comparative Visualization mode Temporal Pipeline Overview Time Dependent Filters (vtkTemporalXXX) Manipulating Time in Filters (C++ code)… Gotchas & Bugs Future Plans

  3. Data Import

  4. Formats Supported • Exodus (used by several US research facilities) • vtkPVDReader (vtk XML Collection) • filename.pvd + Filename-00.vtu/vti/vtp etc • vtkFileSeriesReader • vtkXML * Reader • PolyData, UnstructuredGrid, StructuredGrid, ImageData, RectilinearGrid, Multiblock, Heirarchical etc. • Legacy VTK files with 001, 002, 003 filenames • Ensight (case files, ASCII/Binary data) • OpenFOAM, SpyPlot, Phasta, STL, MFIX (untested by me) • Xdmf (extensible data model format) • XML light data with geometry/time information inside • Hdf5 – heavy – big data containing scalars/fields • (CSCS) custom readers include netCDF,H5Part (from CSCS web site)

  5. Vtk (XML based) file format VTK Collection - Easy to create by hand if necessary A General purpose holder for vtk XML files of all types vtu=unstructured, vtp=polydata, vtr=rectilinear, vti=imagedata Each individual file can be binary/text, compressed or not <VTKFile type="Collection" version="0.1" byte_order="LittleEndian"> <Collection> <DataSettimestep="0.01" group="" part="0" file="Foo_001.vtu"/> <DataSettimestep=“0.02" group="" part="0" file=“Foo_002.vtu"/> <DataSettimestep=“0.03" group="" part="0" file=“Foo_003.vtu"/> </Collection> </VTKFile> The VTK Collection is in fact a generic holder for MultiBlockcomposite datasets which can store time information too. The vtkXMLReader family is responsible for loading this kind of data. User can use vtkXML_xxx_Writer to write N time steps of any kind of data and then add a little XML meta data to describe it. Caveat : pvd time collections are not working well in parallel (NxM split of blocks)

  6. .pvd versus File List • .pvd collection is a true Time compatible holder for data • Time steps can be specified with real time values • Don’t need to be contiguous or equally spaced • FileSeriesReader : Selecting *.vtu/p/i/etc • simple but efficient way of loading time series • One step per file • Can’t specify true time values • vtkFileSeriesReader is clever • Load one – get one • Load *.ext, get time series • No C++ changes required to reader

  7. vtkFileSeriesReader : make reader time aware <FileSeriesReaderProxy name="XMLUnstructuredGridReader" class="vtkFileSeriesReader" label="XML Unstructured Grid reader" file_name_method="SetFileName"> <Documentation short_help=“blah blah“ long_help=“ditto"> The XML Unstructured Grid reader reads the VTK XML unstructured grid data file format. The standard extension is .vtu. This reader also supports file series. </Documentation>

  8. FileSeriesReader (slide 2) Put details of your existing reader in ExposedProperties <SubProxy> <Proxy name="Reader" proxygroup="internal_sources" proxyname="XMLUnstructuredGridReaderCore"> </Proxy> <ExposedProperties> <Property name="CellArrayInfo" /> <Property name="CellArrayStatus" /> <Property name="PointArrayInfo" /> <Property name="PointArrayStatus" /> </ExposedProperties> </SubProxy>

  9. FileSeriesReader (slide 3) <StringVectorProperty name="FileName" clean_command="RemoveAllFileNames" command="AddFileName" animateable="0" number_of_elements="0" repeat_command="1"> <FileListDomain name="files"/> <Documentation> The list of files to be read by the reader. If more than 1 file is specified, the reader will switch to file series mode in which it will pretend that it can support time and provide 1 file per time step. </Documentation> </StringVectorProperty>

  10. FileSeriesReader (slide 4) The part which makes it ‘time aware’ <DoubleVectorProperty name="TimestepValues" information_only="1"> <TimeStepsInformationHelper/> <Documentation> Available timestep values. </Documentation> </DoubleVectorProperty> </FileSeriesReaderProxy>

  11. Old and New Time in ParaView In PV2.x Time was generally animated by changing the TimeStep value of a reader (or filter sometimes). In PV3.x Time is an information variable/object passed down the pipeline which makes it possible for filters to modify time before passing it to their source. For this reason, the GUI sets the time inside the Rendering/Mapping code and not via a TimeStep variable. Some older (custom) readers may still have a TimeStep variable, but this is being phased out and its use is not encouraged – unless you are trying to do something ‘a bit special’ (see later slides).

  12. Reader XML For any reader If you omit this (this is all you need in the XML) Then you won’t see the time information. • <DoubleVectorProperty • name="TimestepValues" • information_only="1"> • <TimeStepsInformationHelper/> • <Documentation> • Available timestep values. • </Documentation> • </DoubleVectorProperty> It connects the TIME_STEPS key to the GUI

  13. The old method (xml for reference) <IntVectorProperty name="TimeStep" command="SetTimeStep" number_of_elements="1" default_values="0" animateable="0" information_property="TimestepValues"> <IntRangeDomain name="range"> <RequiredProperties> <Property name="TimeStepRangeInfo" function="Range"/> </RequiredProperties> </IntRangeDomain> <Documentation> Set the current timestep. </Documentation> </IntVectorProperty> And for convenience we usually provided a GetTimestepValues(vector)

  14. C++ Reader : RequestInformation Scan files/data structures and build a list/vector/array of times Set TIME_STEPS for discrete time data (most readers really) outInfo->Set( vtkStreamingDemandDrivenPipeline::TIME_STEPS(), &this->TimeStepValues[0], this->TimeStepValues.size()); Set TIME_RANGE if continuous, but can also be set for discrete double timeRange[2]; timeRange[0] = this->TimeStepValues.front(); timeRange[1] = this->TimeStepValues.back(); outInfo->Set( vtkStreamingDemandDrivenPipeline::TIME_RANGE(), timeRange, 2);

  15. C++ Reader : RequestData Find the correct time step (index into array of step values) if ( outInfo->Has(vtkStreamingDemandDrivenPipeline::UPDATE_TIME_STEPS())) { // usually only one actual step requested double requestedTimeValue = outInfo->Get(vtkStreamingDemandDrivenPipeline::UPDATE_TIME_STEPS())[0]; this->ActualTimeStep = vtkstd::find_if( this->TimeStepValues.begin(), this->TimeStepValues.end(), vtkstd::bind2nd( WithinTolerance( ), requestedTimeValue )) - this->TimeStepValues.begin(); }

  16. C++ Reader : RequestData Time stamp the output DataObject using DATA_TIME_STEPS output->GetInformation()->Set(vtkDataObject::DATA_TIME_STEPS(), &requestedTimeValue, 1); Nothing bad happens if you don’t – But filters which use the time information won’t get what they need. vtkTemporalPathLineFilter builds lists of data times for each frame and joins the dots. You can read the UPDATE_TIME_STEPS key, but it might not be the same, and is strictly only present during RequestUpdateExtent

  17. GUI Controls Animating with Time

  18. Animation GUI Controls • Time value displayed in toolbar – • Time step mode – user can change step • Sequence mode – user can change time freely • VCR style toolbar has play controls • (play, step forward/back, jump to start/end) • Data with Time support shows the timesteps in the information tab. (Lacks ability to click on timestep and jump to it) • Animation control has settings for time stepping and keyframes • Abort button to stop movie generation not obvious

  19. Time Modes in Animation Inspector Snap to TimeSteps • When you click ‘play’ the animation will begin at whatever time step you are on and continue until it either reaches the end (or is stopped manually). • When stopped the animation will continue from where it left off if restarted. • Each frame played represents a single time step of the input data • There is no need to set any keyframes or specify any particular property to animate. • The Track selection is used to select or create keyframes

  20. Time Modes in Animation Inspector Snap to TimeSteps : * * * Warning * * * • When dataset 1 is loaded it may have time values • 0, 1, 2, 3, …..N • When dataset 2 is loaded it may have time values • 0.5, 1.5, 2.5, 3.5, …..M • Playing an animation in Snap To TimeSteps mode will traverse ALL KNOWN Timesteps – which means • 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5 …..max(M,N) • This can cause unexpected results! • Future time support should allow you to ‘Snap to active pipeline steps’ so that only the times exported for a particular dataset/filter will be traversed. (In development). • Fix : Use Sequence mode and ‘lock’ the start and end times to prevent changes

  21. Time Modes in Animation Inspector Sequence Mode • The start and end times correspond to the max and min values of time in the data you loaded. • If you manually change the start/end times you can ‘Lock’ the new times – this prevents them being reset to the default start/end times if new data is loaded. • Animation will now ignore the Time steps present in the data and use interval=(end/start)/(numFrames-1) • This is frequently NOT WHAT YOU WANT

  22. Time Modes in Animation Inspector • Worked example • interval=(end/start)/(numFrames-1) 60.001424 - 50.001424 = 10 • Num Frames = 10 • We should get our original time steps back (1s per step) • In fact we get 10/(numFrames-1) = 1.11111111s/frame • Need to use 11 frames to get 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 • Note : In the some versions of PV3 selecting time values which are not exactly the same as those present will produce no update. It should snap to the nearest time step, but does not. See SnapToTimeSteps for a fix.

  23. Time Modes in Animation Inspector Real Time • Animates using the ‘Wall time’ • Not always useful for the majority of filters/data sources that we use • Useful to animate ‘as fast as we can’ if data was stored with time representing a real clock value and we wish to ‘play back’ data in real time. • In this mode not all times may be displayed. Some will be skipped or some may be on screen for ages. • Could also be very handy for integrating generators of data (eg sensor equipment) into the gui and displaying the real time update of the sensor (no examples of this yet though)

  24. Comparative visualization

  25. Comparative View Inspector • Allows MxN array of views on the same data • Allows a variable to be changed along the X axis. • Wrong - limitation <is> used to be that time must be between 0.0-1.0 for the view to operate • Solution : • TemporalShiftScale with • 1/N scale factor • (or use Normalize flag set if present in CVS)

  26. Same Data at multiple T • Uses Time steps of selected object • Avoid mismatched time display in same window. • FilmStrip uses X • Comparative : X&Y • Works, but patience required

  27. Comparative viz Summary • Much easier than • Creating multiple windows manually • Setting up Shift/Scale • Instantiating Pipelines • Setting view/display properties • Can also use other plot styles.

  28. Time Dependent Algorithms/Filters Pipeline Introduction

  29. Pipeline Introduction The pipeline is demand driven with data flowing downstream Information flowing up and down stream In PV3 Time is part of the Information flow. Data filter(s) Data source Display/GUI Renderer UPDATE_TIME_STEPS Information

  30. How does it work • How does the pipeline actually fit together • All filters are connected together by Executives which receive information from downstream (and upstream) and decide • Are the data inputs valid • Are the data outputs valid • Is everything else valid • Has anything changed since I last updated • In PV3 Time is passed as information and the executives can LOOP portions of the pipeline over multiple time steps • This means that filters can request multiple time steps • This enables us to implement Time Dependent Algorithms

  31. Pipeline Looping • vtkTemporalDataSet • When the pipeline is looped to generate multiple time steps, the executive generates a dataset collection • The collection is passed to the temporal algorithm • The algorithm can request any number of time steps • But usually 2 (linear interpolation) • In order to make looping work, some information keys are used internally

  32. Information Keys During Updates, the pipeline makes 4 request passes… • DataObject, Information, UpdateExtent, Data Keys exported by time aware sources • TIME_RANGE (continuous), TIME_STEPS (discrete) • Time aware reader will declare N steps 0.0, 0.1, 0.2…..etc Keys used during requests • UPDATE_TIME_STEPS (Filter says ‘I want these’) • Interpolator says I need times 0.1 and 0.2 for example Keys set during execution • DATA_TIME_STEPS (Source says ‘I made these’) • Data generator says I generated times 0.1 and 0.2 Keys used internally by executives • REQUIRES_TIME_DOWNSTREAM (looping will be needed) • CONTINE_EXECUTING (multiple passes inside algorithm)

  33. Time Dependent Algorithms/Filters Interpolation

  34. (Linear) Interpolation • vtkTemporalInterpolator • Linearly interpolates between 2 time steps • When Time T.5 is requested it requests times T and T+1 • 2 Modes of Operation • Continuous • Discrete • Continuous Mode • DiscreteTimeStepInterval=0.0 • Filter generates no TIME_STEPS on output – just a TIME_RANGE • GUI can request any timebetween min/max • Discrete Mode • DiscreteTimeStepInterval>0 • Filter generates (max-min)/DiscreteTimeStepInterval steps • GUI sees discrete data with new TIME_STEPS values

  35. (Linear) Interpolation Continuous mode • Input data (left) has N discrete time steps • Output data (right) has no time steps • It does report a TIME_RANGE • So the GUI knows that any time between min/max can be requested

  36. Interpolation – Continuous mode Data Courtesy : David Graham, Plymouth UK.

  37. (Linear) Interpolation Discrete mode • Example : • DiscreteTimeStepInterval=0.01 • New time steps are generated and the output data ‘looks’ like it has 10x as many time steps. • Note that no interpolation of the data has been performed yet, only when something is actually rendered/requested will the interpolation take place.

  38. Interpolation – Discrete mode

  39. (Linear) Interpolation • What can be interpolated • Any Dataset which does not change topology between time steps • Point positions are interpolated • Connectivity (cells are copied) • Point Data is interpolated • Cell Data is interpolated • ImageData/PolyData/Rectilinear/Unstructured • All can be interpolated if cell connectivity and number of cells remains the same • MultiBlock/MultiGroup/Heirarchical/AMR • If the tree structure remains the same between time steps and the individual leaves satisfy above conditions • Other interpolation methods could be added

  40. Fixing Problems with the interpolator • Discrete mode • Given an input with N time steps, but a few are accidentally missing (lost of never generated) • Set DiscreteTimeStep Interval to the original time step size (say 0.1 or 0.01 etc) • Data saved every Nth frame to save IO time. • Output now seems to be exactly the same as the input – except that the steps that were missing from the input are recreated using interpolation when requested on the output • Animate using ‘Snap To TimeSteps’ mode • Animation will look like intended original

  41. Problem Fixing Example (Interpolation) Before Missing data, low sampling Problems for particle tracer After Lovely

  42. Temporal DataSet Cache

  43. Interpolation – Use a cache If animation from 0->t is performed using a TemporalInterpolator, the interpolator will request 2 time steps each time it updates Interpolating at 0.1 spacing between 2 steps causes Step 0 + Step 1 : Output Step 0.1 Step 0 + Step 1 : Output Step 0.2 Each step N times! Step 0 + Step 1 : Output Step 0.3 Use a TemporalDataSetCache to store 2 timesteps and prevent this repeated re-execution of the pipeline Data source (time aware) TemporalDataSet Cache Interpolator Display/GUI Renderer

  44. Branching Time – Use a cache It’s not just the filter delivering the data at T, but the whole upstream pipeline that is protected… Consider the case where a pipeline branches and different T values are requested. The cache prevents updates from one section propagating too far upstream and forcing the other branch to be re-executed needlessly. Simple filter(s) (no special time requirements) Data source (time aware) Temporal DataSetCache TemporalFilter (requires multiple time steps, e.g.. Particle tracer) Display/GUI Renderer TemporalShiftScale (modifies time values)

  45. Branching Time – Caution in the GUI When different values to T are visible/manipulated Only display the leaf nodes of the pipeline Rendering intermediate portions can trigger unwanted/confusing updates Display/GUI Renderer Simple filter(s) (no special time requirements) UPDATE_TIME_STEPS UPDATE_TIME_STEPS Data source (time aware) Temporal DataSetCache TemporalFilter (requires multiple time steps, e.g.. Particle tracer) Display/GUI Renderer TemporalShiftScale (modifies time values)

  46. Multiple Inputs Related Cautionary Note #1

  47. Multiple Inputs • Time dependent filters with multiple inputs • Trigger updates on all inputs • Particle Tracer is one example Avoid this. Save Seeds if possible UPDATE_TIME_STEPS Data source (time aware) Temporal DataSetCache Particle Tracer Display/GUI Renderer UPDATE_TIME_STEPS Slice – Seed Points (for example)

  48. Temporal Snap to TimeSteps

  49. SnapToTimeSteps Example Data source (time aware) TemporalDataSet Cache Interpolator Time To Text Display/GUI Renderer Snap To TimeStep Time To Text

  50. Time Display Side note Source : Time Source Takes time from the UPDATE_TIME_STEPS Actually it takes it directly from the view which is responsible for setting the key on the filter/output Filter->Temporal->Annotate Time Takes its time from DATA_TIME_STEPS Which is the actual time step output from the filter The two might not always be the same (snap to timestep for example)

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