We return 0 for this particular architecture but should instead be
returning the number of lines.
Fixes users who check the return value matches what they expect.
The NEON hscale function only supports X8 filter sizes and should only
be selected when these are being used. At the moment filterAlign is
set to 8 but in the future when extra NEON assembly for specific sizes is
added they will need to have checks here too.
The immediate usecase for this change is making the hscale checkasm
test easier and without NEON specific edge-cases (x86 already has these
guards).
Signed-off-by: Josh de Kock <josh@itanimul.li>
The x18 is a reserved platform register on Darwin and Windows.
x8/w8 seems to be unused in this function though (and same about
x10 and x14), so there's really no reason to use x18 here - just change
the uses of x18/w18 into x8/w8 instead without any further rewrites.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This patch rewrites the innermost loop of ff_yuv2planeX_8_neon to avoid zips and
horizontal adds by using fused multiply adds. The patch also uses ld1r to load
one element and replicate it across all lanes of the vector. The patch also
improves the clipping code by removing the shift right instructions and
performing the shift with the shift-right narrow instructions.
I see 8% difference on an m6g instance with neoverse-n1 CPUs:
$ ffmpeg -nostats -f lavfi -i testsrc2=4k:d=2 -vf bench=start,scale=1024x1024,bench=stop -f null -
before: t:0.014015 avg:0.014096 max:0.015018 min:0.013971
after: t:0.012985 avg:0.013013 max:0.013996 min:0.012818
Tested with `make check` on aarch64-linux.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Pop <spop@amazon.com>
Reviewed-by: Clément Bœsch <u@pkh.me>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This patch implements ff_hscale_8_to_15_neon with NEON fused multiply accumulate
and bumps the vectorization factor from 2 to 4.
The speedup is of 25% on Graviton1 A1 instances based on A-72 cpus:
$ ffmpeg -nostats -f lavfi -i testsrc2=4k:d=2 -vf bench=start,scale=1024x1024,bench=stop -f null -
before: t:0.040303 avg:0.040287 max:0.040371 min:0.039214
after: t:0.032168 avg:0.032215 max:0.033081 min:0.032146
The speedup is of 39% on Graviton2 m6g instances based on Neoverse-N1 cpus:
$ ffmpeg -nostats -f lavfi -i testsrc2=4k:d=2 -vf bench=start,scale=1024x1024,bench=stop -f null -
before: t:0.019446 avg:0.019423 max:0.019493 min:0.019181
after: t:0.014015 avg:0.014096 max:0.015018 min:0.013971
Tested with `make check` on aarch64-linux.
Signed-off-by: Sebastian Pop <spop@amazon.com>
Reviewed-by: Jean-Baptiste Kempf <jb@videolan.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
y_offset and y_coeff being successive 32-bit integers, they are packed
into 8 bytes instead of 2x8 bytes.
See https://developer.apple.com/library/ios/documentation/Xcode/Conceptual/iPhoneOSABIReference/Articles/ARM64FunctionCallingConventions.html
> iOS diverges from Procedure Call Standard for the ARM 64-bit
> Architecture in several ways
[...]
> In the generic procedure call standard, all function arguments passed
> on the stack consume slots in multiples of 8 bytes. In iOS, this
> requirement is dropped, and values consume only the space required.
[...]
> Padding is still inserted on the stack to satisfy arguments’ alignment
> requirements.