The FATE test 'checkasm-sw_yuv2rgb' currently fails on this platform,
in both little- and big-endian configurations with AltiVec enabled.
Disable it for the time being.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This is a preliminary step to separating these into a new struct. This
commit contains no functional changes, it is a pure search-and-replace.
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
And preserve the public SwsContext as separate name. The motivation here
is that I want to turn SwsContext into a public struct, while keeping the
internal implementation hidden. Additionally, I also want to be able to
use multiple internal implementations, e.g. for GPU devices.
This commit does not include any functional changes. For the most part, it is
a simple rename. The only complications arise from the public facing API
functions, which preserve their current type (and hence require an additional
unwrapping step internally), and the checkasm test framework, which directly
accesses SwsInternal.
For consistency, the affected functions that need to maintain a distionction
have generally been changed to refer to the SwsContext as *sws, and the
SwsInternal as *c.
In an upcoming commit, I will provide a backing definition for the public
SwsContext, and update `sws_internal()` to dereference the internal struct
instead of merely casting it.
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
I want to move away from having random leaf processing functions mutate
plane pointers, and while we're at it, we might as well make the strides
and tables const as well.
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
In this case GCC does not treat a const variable initialized
to the compile-time constant "3" as a compile-time constant
and errors out because the argument is not a literal value.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Some files currently rely on libavutil/cpu.h to include it for them;
yet said file won't use include it any more after the currently
deprecated functions are removed, so include attributes.h directly.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Add inline function for vec_xl if VSX is not supported. vec_xl intrinsic
is only available on POWER 7 or higher.
Fixes ticket #8750.
Signed-off-by: Andriy Gelman <andriy.gelman@gmail.com>
The argument to vec_splat_u16 must be a literal. By making the
function always inline and marking the arguments const, gcc can
turn those into literals, and avoid build errors like:
swscale_vsx.c:165:53: error: argument 1 must be a 5-bit signed literal
Fixes#7861.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kolesa <daniel@octaforge.org>
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
While this technically compiles in current ffmpeg, this is only
because ffmpeg is compiled in strict ISO C mode, which disables
the builtin 'vector' keyword for AltiVec/VSX. Instead this gets
replaced with a macro inside altivec.h, which defines vector to
be actually __vector, which accepts random types.
Normally, the vector keyword should be used only with plain
scalar non-typedef types, such as unsigned int. But we have the
vec_(s|u)(8|16|32) macros, which can be used in a portable manner,
in util_altivec.h in libavutil.
This is also consistent with other AltiVec/VSX code elsewhere in
the tree.
Fixes#7861.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Kolesa <daniel@octaforge.org>
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
gcc 6.x and 7.x generate wrong code for little endian machines
for the vec_lvsl/vec_perm instruction combos in some cases.
The bug was fixed in version 8.x
If these instructions are replaced with vec_xl, the problem goes
away for all versions of the compilers.
Fixes ticket #7124.
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.
./ffmpeg -f lavfi -i yuvtestsrc=duration=1:size=1200x1440 -sws_flags fast_bilinear \
-s 1200x720 -f null -vframes 100 -pix_fmt $i -nostats \
-cpuflags 0 -v error -
32-bit mul, power8 only.
~2x speedup:
rgb24
24431 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
13783 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16383 runs, 1 skips
bgr24
24396 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
14059 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
rgba
26815 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16383 runs, 1 skips
12797 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16383 runs, 1 skips
bgra
27060 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
13138 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
argb
26998 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
12728 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16381 runs, 3 skips
bgra
26651 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
13124 UNITS in yuv2packed2, 16384 runs, 0 skips
This is a low speedup, but the x86 mmx version also gets only ~2x. The mmx version
is also heavily inaccurate, while the vsx version has high accuracy.
./ffmpeg -f lavfi -i yuvtestsrc=duration=1:size=1200x1440 -sws_flags fast_bilinear \
-s 1200x1440 -f null -vframes 100 -pix_fmt $i -nostats \
-cpuflags 0 -v error -
32-bit mul, power8 only.
1.8-2.3x speedup:
rgb24
18192 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32767 runs, 1 skips
9983 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32760 runs, 8 skips
bgr24
18665 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32766 runs, 2 skips
9925 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32763 runs, 5 skips
rgba
20239 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32767 runs, 1 skips
8794 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32759 runs, 9 skips
bgra
20354 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8770 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32761 runs, 7 skips
argb
20185 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8761 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32761 runs, 7 skips
bgra
20360 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32766 runs, 2 skips
8759 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32764 runs, 4 skips
This is a low speedup, but the x86 mmx version also gets only ~2x. The mmx version
is also heavily inaccurate, while the vsx version has high accuracy.
./ffmpeg -f lavfi -i yuvtestsrc=duration=1:size=1200x1440 \
-s 1200x1440 -f null -vframes 100 -pix_fmt $i -nostats \
-cpuflags 0 -v error -
This uses 32-bit mul, so POWER8 only.
The following output formats get about 4.5x speedup:
rgb24
39980 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8774 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
bgr24
40069 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8772 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32766 runs, 2 skips
rgba
39759 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8681 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32767 runs, 1 skips
bgra
39729 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8696 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32766 runs, 2 skips
argb
39766 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8672 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32766 runs, 2 skips
bgra
39784 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32768 runs, 0 skips
8659 UNITS in yuv2packed1, 32767 runs, 1 skips
./ffmpeg_g -f rawvideo -pix_fmt rgb24 -s hd1080 -i /dev/zero -pix_fmt yuv420p16be \
-s 1920x1728 -f null -vframes 100 -v error -nostats -
9-14 bit funcs get about 6x speedup, 16-bit gets about 15x.
Fate passes, each format tested with an image to video conversion.
Only POWER8 includes 32-bit vector multiplies, so POWER7 is locked out
of the 16-bit function. This includes the vec_mulo/mule functions too,
not just vmuluwm.
With TIMER_REPORT skips disabled:
yuv420p9le
12412 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
73136 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p9be
12481 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
73410 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p10le
12322 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72546 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p10be
12291 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72935 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p12le
12316 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72708 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p12be
12319 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72577 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p14le
12259 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72516 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p14be
12440 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
72962 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p16le
10548 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
73429 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
yuv420p16be
10634 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
150959 UNITS in planarX, 131072 runs, 0 skips
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
This function wouldn't benefit from VSX instructions, so I put it
under altivec.
./ffmpeg_g -f rawvideo -pix_fmt rgb24 -s hd1080 -i /dev/zero -pix_fmt grayf32le \
-f null -vframes 100 -v error -nostats -
3743 UNITS in planar1, 65495 runs, 41 skips
-cpuflags 0
23511 UNITS in planar1, 65530 runs, 6 skips
grayf32be
4647 UNITS in planar1, 65449 runs, 87 skips
-cpuflags 0
28608 UNITS in planar1, 65530 runs, 6 skips
The native speedup is 6.28133, and the bswapping one 6.15623.
Fate passes, each format tested with an image to video conversion.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Passes fate on LE (with "lavc/jrevdct: Avoid an aliasing violation" applied).
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
Tested-by: Michael Kostylev on BE
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
./ffmpeg_g -f rawvideo -pix_fmt rgb24 -s hd1080 -i /dev/zero -pix_fmt yuv420p \
-f null -vframes 100 -v error -nostats -
1158 UNITS in planar1, 65528 runs, 8 skips
-cpuflags 0
19082 UNITS in planar1, 65533 runs, 3 skips
16.48 speedup ratio. On x86, SSE2 is ~7. Curiously, the Power C version
takes as many cycles as the x86 SSE2 version, yikes it's fast.
Note that this function uses VSX instructions, but is not marked so.
This is because several existing functions also make that mistake.
I'll submit a patch moving them once this is reviewed.
Signed-off-by: Lauri Kasanen <cand@gmx.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This patch addresses Trac ticket #5570. The optimized functions are in file
libswscale/ppc/input_vsx.c. Each optimized function name is a concatenation of the
corresponding name in libswscale/input.c with suffix _vsx.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>