From x86inc:
> On AMD cpus <=K10, an ordinary ret is slow if it immediately follows either
> a branch or a branch target. So switch to a 2-byte form of ret in that case.
> We can automatically detect "follows a branch", but not a branch target.
> (SSSE3 is a sufficient condition to know that your cpu doesn't have this problem.)
x86inc can automatically determine whether to use REP_RET rather than
REP in most of these cases, so impact is minimal. Additionally, a few
REP_RETs were used unnecessary, despite the return being nowhere near a
branch.
The only CPUs affected were AMD K10s, made between 2007 and 2011, 16
years ago and 12 years ago, respectively.
In the future, everyone involved with x86inc should consider dropping
REP_RETs altogether.
The butterflies_fixed function pointer declaration specifies av_restrict
for the first two pointer arguments. So the corresponding function
definitions should honor this declaration.
MSVC emits warning C4113 for this.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
To support non-aligned buffers during the post-transform step, just iterate
backwards over the array.
This allows using the 15xN-point FFT, with which the speed is 2.1 times
faster than our old libavcodec implementation.
~4x faster than the C version.
The shuffles in the 15pt dim1 are seriously expensive. Not happy with it,
but I'm contempt.
Can be easily converted to pure AVX by removing all vpermpd/vpermps
instructions.
This commit implements an iMDCT in pure assembly.
This is capable of processing any mod-8 transforms, rather than just
power of two, but since power of two is all we have assembly for
currently, that's what's supported.
It would really benefit if we could somehow use the C code to decide
which function to jump into, but exposing function labels from assebly
into C is anything but easy.
The post-transform loop could probably be improved.
This was somewhat annoying to write, as we must support arbitrary
strides during runtime. There's a fast branch for stride == 4 bytes
and a slower one which uses vgatherdps.
Zen 3 benchmarks for stride == 4 for old (av_imdct_half) vs new (av_tx):
128pt:
2811 decicycles in av_tx (imdct),16775916 runs, 1300 skips
3082 decicycles in av_imdct_half,16776751 runs, 465 skips
256pt:
4920 decicycles in av_tx (imdct),16775820 runs, 1396 skips
5378 decicycles in av_imdct_half,16776411 runs, 805 skips
512pt:
9668 decicycles in av_tx (imdct),16775774 runs, 1442 skips
10626 decicycles in av_imdct_half,16775647 runs, 1569 skips
1024pt:
19812 decicycles in av_tx (imdct),16777144 runs, 72 skips
23036 decicycles in av_imdct_half,16777167 runs, 49 skips
Directly branch into the special 64-point deinterleave
subroutine rather than going through the general deinterleave.
64-point transform timings on Zen 3:
Before:
1974 decicycles in av_tx (fft),16776864 runs, 352 skips
After:
1956 decicycles in av_tx (fft),16775378 runs, 1838 skips
x64 always has MMX, MMXEXT, SSE and SSE2 and this means
that some functions for MMX, MMXEXT, SSE and 3dnow are always
overridden by other functions (unless one e.g. explicitly
disables SSE2). So given that the only systems which benefit
from ff_vector_fmul_window_3dnowext are truely ancient 32bit
AMD x86s it is removed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
x64 always has MMX, MMXEXT, SSE and SSE2 and this means
that some functions for MMX, MMXEXT, SSE and 3dnow are always
overridden by other functions (unless one e.g. explicitly
disables SSE2). So given that the only systems which benefit
from the 8x8 MMX (overridden by MMXEXT) or the 16x16 MMXEXT
(overridden by SSE2) are truely ancient 32bit x86s they are removed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
When the SLOW_GATHER flag was added to the AVX2 version, this
made FMA3-features not enabled on Zen CPUs.
As FMA3 adds 6-7% across all platforms that support it, in
the interest of saving space, this commit removes the AVX
version and replaces it with an FMA3 version.
The only CPUs affected are Sandy Bridge and Bulldozer, which
have AVX support, but no FMA3 support.
In the future, if there's a demand for it, a version of the
function duplicated for AVX can be added.
This reverts commit 82a68a8771.
Smarter slow ISA penalties makes gathers still useful.
The intention is to use gathers with the final stage of non-ptwo iMDCTs,
where they give benefit.
Its performance loss ranges from either being just as fast as individual loads
(Skylake), a few percent slower (Alderlake), 8% slower (Zen 3), to completely
disasterous (older/other CPUs).
Sadly, gathers never panned out fast on x86, even with the benefit of time and
implementation experience.
This also saves a register, as there's no need to fill out an additional
register mask.
Zen 3 (16384-point transform):
Before: 1561050 decicycles in av_tx (fft), 131072 runs, 0 skips
After: 1449621 decicycles in av_tx (fft), 131072 runs, 0 skips
Alderlake:
2% slower on big transforms (65536), to 1% (131072), to a few percent for smaller
sizes.
Some of these were made possible by moving several common macros to
libavutil/macros.h.
While just at it, also improve the other headers a bit.
Reviewed-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Only include it if it is needed, namely if __MMX__ is undefined.
X86 is currently the only arch where lavu/cpu.h is basically
automatically included (for internal development): #if ARCH_X86
is true, lavu/internal.h (which is basically included everywhere)
includes lavu/x86/emms.h which can mask missing inclusions
of lavu/cpu.h if the developer works on x86/x64. This has happened
in 8e825ec3ab and also earlier
(see 6d2365882f).
By including said header only if necessary ordinary developer machines
will behave like non-x86 arches, so that missing inclusions of cpu.h
won't go unnoticed any more.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Otherwise nasm writes the full host-specific paths into .o
output, which breaks binary reproducibility.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kanavin <alex.kanavin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
This commit does some refactoring to make defining assembly codelets
smaller, and fixes compiler redefinition warnings. It also allows
for other assembly versions to reuse the same boilerplate code as
x86.
Finally, it also adds the out_of_place flag to all assembly codelets.
This changes nothing, as out-of-place operation was assumed to be
available anyway, but this makes it more explicit.
Makes Bulldozer prefer AVX functions rather than AVX2,
which are 64% slower:
AVX: 117653 decicycles in av_tx (fft), 1048535 runs, 41 skips
AVX2: 193385 decicycles in av_tx (fft), 1048561 runs, 15 skips
The only difference between both is that vgatherdpd is used in
the former. We don't want to mark them with the new SLOW_GATHER
flag however, since gathers are still faster on Haswell/Zen 2/3
than plain loads.
This broke builds with --disable-mmx, which also disabled assembly
entirely, but ARCH_X86 was still true, so the init file tried to find
assembly that didn't exist.
Instead of checking for architecture, check if external x86 assembly
is enabled.
This commit rewrites the internal transform code into a constructor
that stitches transforms (codelets).
This allows for transforms to reuse arbitrary parts of other
transforms, and allows transforms to be stacked onto one
another (such as a full iMDCT using a half-iMDCT which in turn
uses an FFT). It also permits for each step to be individually
replaced by assembly or a custom implementation (such as an ASIC).
Changes av_clipf to return amin if a is nan.
Before if a is nan av_clipf_c returned nan and
av_clipf_sse would return amax. Now the both
should behave the same.
This works because nan > amin is false.
The max(nan, amin) will be amin.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The field is a standard field, yet we were loading it as if it was
a quadword. This worked for forward transforms by chance, but broke
when the transform was inverse.
checkasm couldn't catch that because we only test forward transforms,
which are identical to inverse transforms but with a different revtab.