These arrays have a size of 180 resp. six bytes. This does not
make it worthwhile to export them due to the overhead this occurs;
for x64 Elf/Linux/GNU: 2x2B version, 2x24B .dynsym, 24B .rela.dyn,
8B .got, 4B hash + twice the size of the name (here 20+23B).
Therefore these symbols are unavprived and duplicated for shared
builds.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
It is small (16 B) and therefore the overhead of exporting it more
than outweighs the size savings from not having duplicated symbols:
When the symbol is no longer avpriv, one saves twice the size of
the string containing the symbols name (2x30 byte), two entries
in .dynsym (24 bytes each on x64), one entry in the importing libraries
.got and .rela.dyn (8 + 24 bytes on x64) and two entries for the
symbol version (2 bytes each) and one hash value in the exporting
library (4 bytes).
(The exact numbers are of course different for other platforms
(e.g. when using dlls), but given that the strings saved alone
more than outweigh the array size it can be presumed that this
is beneficial for all platforms.)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
The values of {FLT,DBL}_{MAX,MIN} macros on some systems (older musl
libc, some BSD flavours) are not exactly representable, i.e.
(double)DBL_MAX == DBL_MAX is false
This violates (at least some interpretations of) the C99 standard and
breaks code (e.g. in vf_fps) like
double f = DBL_MAX;
[...]
if (f == DBL_MAX) { // f has not been changed yet
[....]
}
Iterative implementation of 32 bit fixed point split-radix FFT.
Max FFT that can be calculated currently is 2^12.
Signed-off-by: Nedeljko Babic <nbabic@mips.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
These windows do not really belong in fft/mdct files and were
easily confused with the similarly named tables used by rdft.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
Instead of defining functions in per-arch header files included
by the main cpu.c, define them normally and call them from the
generic one.
Originally committed as revision 25084 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
It contains optimizations that are not specific to i386 and
libavutil uses this naming scheme already.
Originally committed as revision 16270 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
c is 1.9x faster than previous c (on various x86 cpus), sse is 1.6x faster than previous sse.
Originally committed as revision 14698 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
include paths in the source files.
mostly from a patch by Ronald S. Bultje, rbultje ronald.bitfreak net
Originally committed as revision 9034 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
Patch by Zuxy Meng, zuxy <<dot>> meng >>at<< gmail <<dot>> com
Minor non-functional diff-related fixes by me.
Originally committed as revision 5125 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk