The implementation is pretty straight-forward. Most of the existing
NV12 codepaths work regardless of subsampling and are re-used as is.
Where necessary I wrote the slightly different NV24 versions.
Finally, the one thing that confused me for a long time was the
asm specific x86 path that did an explicit exclusion check for NV12.
I replaced that with a semi-planar check and also updated the
equivalent PPC code, which Lauri kindly checked.
To make the best use of existing code, I generalised the wrapper
that currently does yuv420p10 to p010 to support any mixture of
input and output sizes between 10 and 16 bits. This had the side
effect of yielding a working code path for all yuv420p1x formats
to p01x.
This disables everything that was deprecated at least 18 months ago.
Readjust the minimum API version as needed, postponing any
API-incompatible changes until the next bump.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
There are no known users of these functions within debian
It should be thus possible to remove these functions without recommandition of a
replacement
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Blackfin is a painful platform to work with, no test machines are available
and the range of multimedia applications is dubious. Thus it only represents
a maintenance burden.
This allows specifying more dither algorithms without using up flags and
without ambiguities.
Also initialize the new field based on the flags and use it.
Note, improving the logic of the checks is left to subsequent
commits, this here only switches from flags to enum.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The version number is useful to check the libavutil version against which
the library was compiled at run-time, which in turn may be useful to deal
with binary compatibility issues.
Refactoring mmx2/mmxext YASM code with cpuflags will force renames.
So switching to a consistent naming scheme beforehand is sensible.
The name "mmxext" is more official and widespread and also the name
of the CPU flag, as reported e.g. by the Linux kernel.