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Hob3l

100x Faster Slicing of SCAD Files for 3D Printing

What is This?

Hob3l is a command line tool for reading SCAD files and writing STL files for 3D printing. The focus is on speed and robustness.

OpenSCAD can convert SCAD to STL, too, but it is very slow, because it first produces a 3D object. And the CGAL library used by OpenSCAD is not very robust: I often get spurious error messages due to unstable 3D arithmetics: 'object may not be a valid 2-manifold'.

Instead, Hob3l uses stable arithmetics to produce an STL file suitable for 3D printing. It first pre-slices the basic 3D objects from the SCAD file into layers and then uses 2D operations on each layer. The 2D operations are much faster than 3D operations, and arithmetically much simpler, and thus easier to get stable.

Hob3l is very robust -- the 2D base library was fuzzed to get rid of numeric instability problems. Hob3l uses integer arithmetics and a snap rounding algorithm to stay within the input coordinate precision. It reads and writes normal floating point numbers, and the float<->int conversions are exact within float precision (the native STL binary number format). If necessary, the precision can be scaled (by default, the unit is 1/8192mm).

How Is It Fast?

To be faster than OpenSCAD, Hob3l replaces 3D operations by faster 2D operations. For this, Hob3l first cuts slices and then applies the boolean operations.

Instead, OpenSCAD applies 3D operations to compute a single 3D object. This is very expensive math, and often arithmetically unstable. But for 3D printing, that single 3D object is not needed: it is cut into slices anyway.

So hob3l reverses the internal workflow. Instead of 'compute in 3D, then slice':

3D CSG

it does 'slice, then compute in 2D':

2D CSG

The idea is explained in more detail in my blog.

Hob3l's main output formats are

  • STL for printing
  • JavaScript/WebGL for viewing and prototyping

Hob3l reads OpenSCAD's native SCAD format, it can import STL files (for 3D imports), and SVG files (for 2D imports).

SCAD Input Format

My SCAD format documentation defines what exactly is supported by Hob3l, and what is different from OpenSCAD.

For the full SCAD format syntax, OpenSCAD can be used as a preprocessor: OpenSCAD can read the full SCAD format and write a simplified version, with only structurs that Hob3l supports. This is a fast preprocessing step, and still avoids OpenSCAD's expensive 3D operations:

    openscad thing.scad -o thing.csg
    hob3l thing.csg -o thing.stl

See Using This Tool.

Valid 2-Manifolds

Hob3l produces only valid 2-manifolds.

Well, if the input polyhedra are really bad, like missing faces, then Hob3l may fail to produce a valid output. But you need blatantly broken input polyhedra for this. This cannot happen unless you use polyhedron() manually in SCAD. Hob3l is not supposed to fail just because you subtract an object from another object and the two share a part of a face (when you get flickering in OpenSCAD): Hob3l either subtracts everything properly, or it leaves a small (valid) polyhedron -- but it does not become unstable and fail on you.

If Hob3l shows unstable behaviour, then that is a bug. Getting it stable took the majority of the development time, because I found this the most annoying problem with OpenSCAD (or the underlying CGAL library).

Status, Stability, Limitations, Future Work, TODO

This tool has been tested very thoroughly for stability and arithmetic robustness, in order to get rid of any floating point instabilities, using a fuzzer and many millions of tests.

The tool can read the specified subset of SCAD (possibly from a preprocessing step by OpenSCAD's to resolve unsupported syntax). Hob3l then slices the input objects, applies the 2D boolean operations (AKA polygon clipping), and then triangulates the resulting polgygons. Then it writes STL format or WebGL/JS.

After that, Slic3r (and probably PrusaSlicer and Cura) can read the STL files Hob3l produces. This step is still necessary, although Hob3l slices the input file, too, because the slicer also does the path planning and G-code generation, which Hob3l does not do.

The input polyhedra must be 2-manifold. However, Hob3l accepts quite a few non-2-manifold input polyhedra. Polyhedra with holes (i.e., missing faces), however, will not work. OpenSCAD (or the CGAL library) probably now has more constraints on well-formedness than Hob3l. E.g., Hob3l's algorithms are robust against wrong handedness of faces.

Hob3l can import STL files (both text and binary formats) for 3D objects and SVG files for 2D objects. Because SVG is a very complex format, only a useful subset is supported, e.g., no CSS styling is implemented. E.g, SVG files written by Inkscape can be read by Hob3l.

The output STL contains separate layers instead of a single solid. In the future, Hob3l may generate one contiguous object. It would be more processing and is not strictly necessary. But if you hit split in Slic3r on the current output of Hob3l, you'll get many separate layer objects -- which is not useful.

Memory management has leaks. I admit I don't care enough, because Hob3l basically starts, allocates, exits, i.e., it does not run for long, so the memory leaks do not build up.

There are never enough tests. However, Hob3l's core algorithms have survived many millions of fuzzing tests with afl.

Supported Output Formats

STL: This is the main output format of Hob3l for which it was first developed. The input SCAD files can be converted to STL and then used as input to a slicer for 3D printing. Both ASCII STL (more precise) and binary STL (smaller) are supported.

PS: For debugging and documentation, including algorithm visualisation, Hob3l can output in PostScript. This is how the overview images on this page where generated: by using single-page PS output, converted to PNG using GraphicsMagick. For debugging, mainly multi-page debug PS output was used, which allows easy browsing (I used gv for its speed and other nice features). Also, this allows to compare different runs and do a step-by-step analysis of what is going on during the algorithm runs. The PS modules has a large number of command line options to customise the output.

WEBGL/JS: For prototyping SCAD files, a web browser can be used as a 3D model viewer by using the WebGL/JavaScript output format. The SCAD file can be edited in your favourite editor, then for visualisation, Hob3l can generate WebGL data (possibly with an intermediate step to let OpenSCAD simplify the input file using its .csg output), and a reload in the web browser will show the new model. This package contains auxiliary files to make it immediately usable, e.g. the surrounding .html file with the WebGL viewer that loads the generated data. See the hob3l-js-copy-aux script.

SCAD: For debugging intermediate steps in the parser and converter, Hob3l can write SCAD format of several of its processing stages. In intermediate stages, however, Hob3l's polyhedra may not be strictly correct when printed in SCAD debug output (they may use wrong handedness of polyhedra faces) and then loaded into OpenSCAD for inspection. (But STL and WebGL/JS output do produce correctly oriented faces.)

JavaScript/WebGL Output

Here's a screenshot of my browser with a part of the Prusa i3 MK3 3D printer rendered by Hob3l:

Mk3 Part

There is an online version available here to play with.

The conversion from .scad to .js takes about 0.7s on my machine, so this is very well suited for prototyping: write the .scad in a text editor, run 'make', reload in browser. To run this conversion yourself, after building, run:

    make clean-test
    time make test-out/curry.js

This should print something like:

./hob3l.exe scad-test/curry.scad -o test-out/curry.js.new.js
Info: Z: min=0.1, step=0.2, layer_cnt=75, max=14.9
mv test-out/curry.js.new.js test-out/curry.js

real  0m0.650s
user  0m0.592s
sys   0m0.044s

Building

Building relies on GNU make and gcc, and uses no automake or other meta-make layer. Both Linux native and the MinGW Windows cross compiler have been tested.

Make variables can be used to switch how the stuff is compiled. Some GCC extensions are used, but I tried not to overdo it (({...}) and __typeof__ are used frequently, though), it should be compilable without too much effort.

Compilation is straight-forward:

    make clean
    make
    make test

Parallel building is supported using the -j option to make.

Some Perl scripts are used to generate C code during compilation.

The resulting executable is called 'hob3l.x'. It is renamed during installation (hob3l on Linux, hob3l.exe on Windows).

Different Build Variants

The makefile supports 'normal', 'release', and 'devel' build variants, which can be switched using the MODE=normal (default), MODE=release, or MODE=devel command line variables for make. The selection is stored in a file .mode.d, so next time you invoke 'make' without a MODE parameter, the previous build variant will be chosen.

E.g.:

    make clean
    make MODE=release
    make test

Different Compiler Targets

To compile with the standard 'gcc', whatever that is, for x86:

    make

To compile with gcc for x86_64 (e.g., 64 bit x86 Linux):

    make TARGET=gcc64

To compile with gcc for i686 (e.g., 32 bit x86 Linux):

    make TARGET=gcc32

To compile with Clang:

    make TARGET=clang

To cross compile for Windows 64 using MinGW:

    make TARGET=win64

To cross compile for Windows 32 using MinGW:

    make TARGET=win32

You can set the exact compiler name by overriding CC:

    make TARGET=win32 CC=my-funny-mingw-gcc

Tweaking Compiler Settings

The Makefile has more settings that can be used to switch to other compilers like clang, or to other target architectures. This is not properly documented yet, so reading the Makefile may be necessary here.

The most likely ones you may want to change are the following (listed with their default setting):

CFLAGS_ARCH  := -march=native

Running Tests

After building, tests can be run, provided that the 'hob3l.x' executable can actually be executed (hopefully). On systems where it works, use

    make test

for that. This runs both the unit tests as well as basic SCAD conversion tests. For full set of checks (asserts) during testing, the 'devel' build variant should be used in addition to the actual build variant.

After installation, the SCAD conversion tests can be run with the installed binary by using

    make check

Each time make check is invoked, it will first remove the old test output files to make sure that the check is actually run. make check also honours the DESTDIR variable to construct the path to the installed executable in the same way as make install.

Installation

The usual installation ceremony is implemented, according to the GNU Coding Standard. I.e., you have make install with prefix, and all *dir options and also DESTDIR support as well as $(NORMAL_INSTALL) markers, and also make uninstall.

    make DESTDIR=./install-root prefix=/usr install

For better package separation, the install target is split into install-bin, install-data, install-lib, install-include (e.g. to compile a separate -dev package as in Debian distributions).

Unfortunately, there is no install-doc yet. FIXME.

Using This Tool, Command Line Options

When in doubt, use hob3l --help.

To convert a complex SCAD file into the subset that Hob3l can read, start by using OpenSCAD to convert to a flat 3D CSG structure with all the syntactic sugar removed. This conversion is fast.

    openscad thing.scad -o thing.csg

You can now use Hob3l to process it:

    hob3l thing.csg -o thing.stl

The result can then be used in your favorite tool for computing print paths.

    slic3r thing.stl

Speed comparison

Depending on the complexity of the model, Hob3l may be much faster than using OpenSCAD with CGAL rendering.

Some examples:

The x-carriage.scad part of my Prusa i3 MK3 printer from the Prusa github repository: let's first convert it to .csg. This conversion is quickly done with OpenSCAD, and the resulting flat SCAD format is what Hob3l can read:

    time openscad x-carriage.scad -o x-carriage.csg
    0m0.034s

To convert to STL using openscad 3D CSG takes a while:

    time openscad x-carriage.csg -o x-carriage.stl
    0m45.208s

Doing the same with Hob3l in 0.2mm layers is about 50 times faster:

    time hob3l x-carriage.csg -o x-carriage.stl
    0m0.824s

The most complex part of the i3 MK3 printer, the extruder-body.scad, before it was reimplemented as step file, takes 2m42s in openscad to convert to STL, while Hob3l takes 1.24s, again with 0.2mm layers. That is 130 times faster.

For one of my own parts useless-box+body, which is less complex, but does not care much about making rendering fast (I definitely set up cylinders with too many polygon corners):

    time openscad uselessbox+body.scad -o uselessbox+body.stl
    0m53.433s

    time hob3l uselessbox+body.scad -o uselessbox+body.stl
    0m0.610s

This is 85 times faster. Over half of the time is spent on writing the STL file, which is 23MB -- STL is huge. Loading and converting only takes 0.23s.

You can push the difference in speed by making the model more complex, particularly when using high detail levels. E.g., the test31b.scad example uses $fn=99 for a few ellipsoids, causing openscad to slow down:

time openscad scad-test/test31b.scad -o test31b.stl
4m30.198s

In contrast, the different algorithms used by Hob3l do not slow down much:

time ./hob3l.exe scad-test/test31b.scad -o test31b.stl
0m0.748s

This is 350 times faster. The difference is of course that with Hob3l, the result is sliced into layers, as the following image demonstrates. The top is the OpenSCAD F6 view, the bottom is Hob3l's WebGL output in my web browser.

OpenSCAD output

Hob3l output

Rendering Differences

The difference of the conversion technique is visible in the model view of the STL, where the 2D CSG slicing technique clearly shows the layers, e.g. for a real-life example sliced a 0.2mm with Hob3l. The top is OpenSCAD's output in Slic3r, the bottom is Hob3l's output in Slic3r:

OpenSCAD model Hob3l model

The final result of the slicer, however, is indistinguishable (I was unable to replicate the exact same view, so the Moiré patterns are different -- but the result is really the same), again OpenSCAD output top, Hob3l bottom:

OpenSCAD preview Hob3l preview

Algorithms

The polyhedra (from SCAD input files) are processed using IEEE double precision floating point coordinates. The 2D algorithms, however, now use 32-bit integer coordinates for exact math (and can handle 31-bit signed values without overflow). Therefore, the coordinates in a polygon slice from a polyhedron are converted from double to int by multiplying by a power of two -- this way, the upper bits of the floating point mantissa (53 bits for double) can be used directly as ints with minimum rounding error. When converting back from int to double, the integer coordinates are divided by the same power of two, meaning that no rounding error occurs: the integer is used directly as the upper mantissa bits for the floating point number (the lower bits are 0). A round trip from int to double to int is then loss-less. As binary STL uses float coordinates (with a 24 bit mantissa, smaller than 32-bit integers), care was taken to scale in such a way that a wide range of float coordinates also convert to STL with no rounding error. And the ASCII STL is printed with many significant digits to ensure that the information gets into the slicer without any loss of precision. All integer operations check for overflow so that the scale value can be adjusted if necessary for weird input files.

The slice algorithm to cut a polygon slice from a polyhedron is a simple ad-hoc algorithm that works by iterating each face, making a cut at a given z height, sorting the cut points, and interpreting them as line segments. The subsequent algorithms need no particular order of edges, so a very simple algorithm is enough here.

The polygon clipping algorithm is a Bentley-Ottmann 1979 (Algorithms for reporting and counting geometric intersections) plane sweep algorithm using exact fractional math for the intersections. Ideas from Martínez, Rueda, Feito 2009 (A new algorithm for computing Boolean operations on polygons) were used to extend Bentley-Ottmann to corner cases like overlapping edges. Also, the inside/outside information is tracked in a way similar to that paper, extended by ideas from Sean Conelly's polybooljs project. The input/output information was then extended to handle more than two polygons at once, by using a boolean function represented by a bit array. This speeds up the 2D processing.

The ideas from Boissonnat and Preparata 2000 (Robust Plane Sweep for Intersecting Segments) helped examine the complexity of the numeric problems and to construct a data type for storing intersection points exactly: with a 160 bit fractional (32 bit integer + 64 bit numerator + 64 bit denominator). This avoids overheads from generic exact math libraries and it is quite fast.

After the intersection algorithm, the snap rounding algorithm by de Berg 2007 (An Intersection-Sensitive Algorithm for Snap Rounding) is run to fit the intersection coordinates back into the input bit width (32-bit integer coordinates).

To get a triangulation (fro the output polyhedron in STL format), the triangulation algorithm of Hertel & Mehlhorn 1983 (Fast Triangulation of the Plane with Respect to Simple Polygons) was used and extended to support coincident vertices, because these cannot be avoided. Also, sequences of collinear edges are resolved.

The same algorithm was adapted also for constructing a polygon outline from the set of edges produced by the preceding algorithm, if no triangulation is needed. This is used in the SCAD language processing, e.g., with operations like extrude or project, where the result of the 2D boolean algorithm is fed back into the CSG tree.

Development

This is a project for me to relax and have fun, to be a distraction and to be different from my day job (which also involves programming). The project follows some policies to avoid stress. for me to continue to have fun.

XNIH: Exclude What's Not Implemented Here

No external libraries or tools are used for this project, except a C compiler, Perl, and libc/POSIX. All functionality is either implemented here, or not at all.

This policy helps me focus on programming, instead of battling APIs. Every API incompatibility will be my own fault. There will be no stress when upgrading to a newer version of a library, because there are none.

C and Perl

This project is implemented in C with gcc extensions, for a reasonably modern C standard. Perl is used for scripts. GnuMake is used for building.

Linux

My development platform is Linux. Other platforms are not excluded, and the Makefile has direct support for Clang and for MinGW compilation. But I cannot debug problems specific to platforms I do not use.

Name

The name Hob3l derives from the German word 'Hobel', meaning 'plane' (as in 'wood plane'). The 'e' was turned to 3 in recognition of the `slic3r' program.