usdtweak is a free and open source editor for Pixar's USD format. The project is still in early stage, but usdtweak can already be used for small and simple tasks like cleaning assets, creating and editing layers or inspecting and fixing existing usd stages.
This project is written in C++ and relies on ImGUI for the UI and GLFW for the windowing system.
There is no roadmap at the moment, as it is my side project and the development is slow and unpredictable, I can only work on it a few hours during the week-end. The original idea behind this project was to improve usdview by adding edition capabilities, for artists, technical directors and users who don't necessarily know the USD ascii syntax or are not familiar with python. So my current goal driving the developments is to provide at least the same functionalities as usdview and some ability to edit the stages and layers.
As of today usdtweak allows
- to edit multiple stages and layers at the same time, copying and pasting prims between layers,
- to edit stages properties selecting the edit target
- to edit layer hierarchy: adding, deleting, reparenting, and renaming prims
- to edit layer stack: adding, deleting new sublayers
- to create and delete compositions like variants, references and payloads, inherits, ...
- to change property values in layers or stages
- to add and delete keys
- a minimal viewport interaction: translating, rotating, scaling objects.
- text editing (for small files)
- and more ...
Drop me an email if you are interested in beta testing on windows or if you can't compile it.
The project is almost self contained and only needs:
- cmake installed (version > 3.14)
- a C++14 compiler installed: MSVC 19 or 17, g++ or clang++.
- a build of Universal Scene Description version >= 20.11. (I am not sure the USD libraries provided with maya, houdini or omniverse would work)
If you managed to build USD, compiling usdtweak should be easy, you need to provide cmake with only 1 required variables:
- pxr_DIR pointing to the USD installation directory containing the file pxrConfig.cmake
Unfortunately if you have compiled USD >= 22.08 with MaterialX you will also need to provide:
- MaterialX_DIR pointing to the MaterialX installation directory containing the file MaterialXConfig.cmake.
On linux it should compile with:
git clone https://github.com/cpichard/usdtweak
cd usdtweak
git checkout develop
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -Dpxr_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.05 ..
make
If you have USD >= 22.08 compiled with MaterialX, cmake becomes:
cmake -Dpxr_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.08 -DMaterialX_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.08/lib/cmake/MaterialX ..
It compiles on MacOS Mojave. The viewport is now enabled for versions of USD superior or equal to 22.08, otherwise it is deactivated because of the OpenGL version not supported on MacOS;
git clone https://github.com/cpichard/usdtweak
cd usdtweak
git checkout develop
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -Dpxr_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.05 ..
make
If you have USD >= 22.08 compiled with MaterialX, cmake becomes:
cmake -Dpxr_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.08 -DMaterialX_DIR=/path/to/usd-22.08/lib/cmake/MaterialX ..
It should compile successfully on Windows 10 with MSVC 19 or 17 using the RelWithDbInfo config. Make sure you open/use the x64 Native Tools commands prompt before typing the following commands:
git clone https://github.com/cpichard/usdtweak
cd usdtweak
git checkout develop
mkdir build
cd build
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -Dpxr_DIR=C:\path\to\usd-22.05 ..
cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo
If you have USD >= 22.08 compiled with MaterialX, you have to add an additional MaterialX_DIR variable to the cmake command, pointing to the MaterialX directory:
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -Dpxr_DIR=C:\path\to\usd-22.08 -DMaterialX_DIR=C:\path\to\usd-22.08\lib\cmake\MaterialX ..
NVidia provides a USD build here if you don't want to compile USD yourself. It needs either VisualStudio 2017 or a more recent version (2019, 2022) with the "MSVC141 - C++ build tools x86/x64" installed. The cmake commands to build usdtweak differ, if you have a more recent version you'll need to specify the toolkit using -T v141
. The Nvidia USD build also needs Python3.7, set the USE_PYTHON3
argument to force cmake to look after Python3, but you'll have to make sure Python3.7 is installed already.
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -T v141 -A x64 -Dpxr_DIR=C:\path\to\nvidia-usd-22.11 -DMaterialX_DIR=C:\path\to\nvidia-usd-22.11\lib\cmake\MaterialX -DUSE_PYTHON3=ON ..
cmake --build . --config Release
You can install usdtweak with its dependencies on windows, it copies the required files in a directory with the following command:
cmake --install . --prefix <where_you_want_to_install_usdtweak> --config RelWithDebInfo
Note that it is not really tested on anything else than my machine/setup so it might not work for you, feel free to get in touch if you have any issue.
There is an experimental packaging system using cpack/NSIS on windows which creates an installer. You have to make sure the nsis application is available on you system, you can download it from here NSIS. The command to create the installer is then:
cmake --build . --target package --config RelWithDebInfo
usdtweak is using GLFW for its windowing system. cmake should normally download, compile and install glfw without any user intervention. However, if you already have a compiled version you want to use instead, and you'll need to disable the automatic build of glfw, by passing an additional cmake variable:
- glfw3_DIR pointing to your GLFW installation directory and containing the file glfw3Config.cmake
A cmake command will then look like:
cmake -G "Visual Studio 16 2019" -A x64 -Dpxr_DIR=C:\path\to\usd-21.11 -Dglfw3_DIR=C:\path\to\glfw3-3.3.6\lib\cmake\glfw3 ..
If you want to know more, or have any issues, questions, drop me an email: [email protected]