Since every DLL can use an individual CRT on Windows, having
an exported function that opens a FILE* won't work if that
FILE* is going to be used from a different DLL (or from user
application code).
Internally within the libraries, the issue can be worked around
by duplicating the function in all libraries (this already happened
implicitly because the function resided in file_open.c) and renaming
the function to ff_fopen_utf8 (so that it doesn't end up exported from
the DLLs) and duplicating it in all libraries that use it.
This makes the avpriv_fopen_utf8 / ff_fopen_utf8 function work in
the exact same way as the existing avpriv_open / ff_open, with the
same setup as introduced in e743e7ae6e.
That mechanism doesn't work for external users, thus deprecate the
existing function.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
It is also used by libavfilter and it is only natural to define it
alongside ff_dlog().
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
These inclusions are not necessary, as cpu.h is already included
wherever it is needed (via direct inclusion or via the arch-specific
headers).
Also remove other unnecessary cpu.h inclusions from ordinary
non-headers.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
These functions have a terrible design, let us fix them before extending
them.
First design mistake: no error code. A helper function for testing
memory allocation failure where AVERROR(ENOMEM) does not appear is
absurd.
Second design mistake: printing a message. Return the error code, let
the caller print the error message.
Third design mistake: hard-coded use of goto.
http://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2020-May/262544.html
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
PSEUDOPAL pixel formats are not paletted, but carried a palette with the
intention of allowing code to treat unpaletted formats as paletted. The
palette simply mapped the byte values to the resulting RGB values,
making it some sort of LUT for RGB conversion.
It was used for 1 byte formats only: RGB4_BYTE, BGR4_BYTE, RGB8, BGR8,
GRAY8. The first 4 are awfully obscure, used only by some ancient bitmap
formats. The last one, GRAY8, is more common, but its treatment is
grossly incorrect. It considers full range GRAY8 only, so GRAY8 coming
from typical Y video planes was not mapped to the correct RGB values.
This cannot be fixed, because AVFrame.color_range can be freely changed
at runtime, and there is nothing to ensure the pseudo palette is
updated.
Also, nothing actually used the PSEUDOPAL palette data, except xwdenc
(trivially changed in the previous commit). All other code had to treat
it as a special case, just to ignore or to propagate palette data.
In conclusion, this was just a very strange old mechnaism that has no
real justification to exist anymore (although it may have been nice and
useful in the past). Now it's an artifact that makes the API harder to
use: API users who allocate their own pixel data have to be aware that
they need to allocate the palette, or FFmpeg will crash on them in
_some_ situations. On top of this, there was no API to allocate the
pseuo palette outside of av_frame_get_buffer().
This patch not only deprecates AV_PIX_FMT_FLAG_PSEUDOPAL, but also makes
the pseudo palette optional. Nothing accesses it anymore, though if it's
set, it's propagated. It's still allocated and initialized for
compatibility with API users that rely on this feature. But new API
users do not need to allocate it. This was an explicit goal of this
patch.
Most changes replace AV_PIX_FMT_FLAG_PSEUDOPAL with FF_PSEUDOPAL. I
first tried #ifdefing all code, but it was a mess. The FF_PSEUDOPAL
macro reduces the mess, and still allows defining FF_API_PSEUDOPAL to 0.
Passes FATE with FF_API_PSEUDOPAL enabled and disabled. In addition,
FATE passes with FF_API_PSEUDOPAL set to 1, but with allocation
functions manually changed to not allocating a palette.
The macros for ICC and MSVC correctly push and pop the diagnostic
state of the compiler when disabling deprecation warnings. The
ones for clang/gcc should do the same. Without this, if a blanket
deprecation warning is applied to the code base it'll be flipped
back on incorrectly with FF_ENABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS.
Signed-off-by: Dale Curtis <dalecurtis@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
We currently only have exported data symbols within libavcodec, but
the concept is easy to extend to other libraries if necessary.
The attribute declaration needs to be in a private header though,
since we can't use CONFIG_SHARED in public installed headers.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This avoids potential undefined behavior in debug mode while still allowing
developers which want to check for potential additional overflows to do so
by manually enabling this.
Reviewed-by: wm4
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Previously, the former form always produced a manually aligned,
padded buffer, while the latter can use DECLARE_ALIGNED, if that
amount of stack alignment is supported.
libavutil/internal.h needs to include mem.h, since it uses
the DECLARE_ALIGNED macro.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Fixes compilation with hardcoded tables after eaff1aa09e
and e71b8119e7
Reviewed-by: Timo Rothenpieler <timo@rothenpieler.org>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The idea is to use ffmath.h for internal implementations of math functions.
Currently, it is used for variants of libm functions, but is by no means
limited to such things.
Note that this is not exported; use lavu/mathematics for such purposes.
Reviewed-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanag@gmail.com>
This is ~2x faster for y not an integer on Haswell+GCC, and should
generally be faster due to the fact that anyway powf essentially does
this under the hood. Made an inline function in lavu/internal.h for this
purpose.
Note that there are some accuracy differences, that should generally be
negligible. In particular, FATE still passes on this platform.
Results in ~ 7% speedup in aac encoding with -march=native, Haswell+GCC.
before:
ffmpeg -i sin.flac -acodec aac -y sin_new.aac 6.05s user 0.06s system 104% cpu 5.821 total
after:
ffmpeg -i sin.flac -acodec aac -y sin_new.aac 5.67s user 0.03s system 105% cpu 5.416 total
This is also faster than an alternative approach that pulls in powf, gets rid of
the crufty NaN checks and other special cases, exploits knowledge about the intervals, etc.
This of course does not exclude smarter approaches; just suggests that
there would need to be significant work on this front of lower utility than
searches for hotspots elsewhere.
Reviewed-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>
Reviewed-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanag@gmail.com>
Fast, reasonably accurate 10^x. Alternative of detection of libm exp10 at configure
time is not worth the trouble, since it is anyway not POSIX or ISO C,
and currently only the GNU libm has it. Furthermore, GNU libm's variant
is ~ 2x slower, and is ironically not correctly rounded (2 ulp off) to justify all
that slowdown.
Reviewed-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Hendrik Leppkes <h.leppkes@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde@gmail.com>
Include macros.h explicitly in common.h so that external code using
FFALIGN does not break. It was already implicitly included through
version.h. Include macros.h in lls.h and internal.h for FFALIGN.
lls.h was including common.h only for FFALIGN and internal.h was
missing the include for FFALIGN. `make checkheaders` did not catch it
because it's an internal header.
The function is renamed to ff_rint64_clip()
This should avoid build failures on VS2012
Feel free to changes this to a different solution
Reviewed-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
The open syscall can obviously fail, and its return code needs to be
checked.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde@gmail.com>
FATE refs changed to accomodate for the new default behavior of the function.
Numbers are now interpreted as a channel layout, instead of a number of channels.
The table is used in libavutil/eval.c.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com>
When compiling libavutil/internal.h as C++11, clang warns that a space
is required between a string literal and an identifier. Put spaces
in concatenations of string literals and EXTERN_PREFIX.
Signed-off-by: Chris Watkins <watk@chromium.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The C runtime C99 compatibility had been improved a lot and it now
rejects some of the compatibility defines provided for the older
versions.
Many thanks to Ray for the time spent testing.
Bug-Id: 864
CC: libav-stable@libav.org