This is possible because the lifetime of these structures coincide.
It has the advantage of allowing to remove AVHWFramesInternal
from the public header; given that AVHWFramesInternal.priv is no more,
most accesses to AVHWFramesInternal are no more; indeed, the only
field accessed of it outside of hwcontext.c is the internal frame pool,
making this commit very simple.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
It is no longer used by any hwcontext, as they all allocate
their private data together with their public data and access
it via AVHWFramesContext.hwctx.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This is possible because the lifetime of these structures coincide.
It has the advantage of allowing to remove the AVHWDeviceInternal
from the public header; given that AVHWDeviceInternal.priv is no more,
all accesses to it happen in hwcontext.c, so that this commit moves
the joint structure there.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
It is no longer used by any hwcontext, as they all allocate
their private data together with their public data and access
it via AVHWDeviceContext.hwctx.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
The test /libavutil/tests/hwdevice checks that when deriving a device
from a source device and then deriving back to the type of the source
device, the result is matching the original source device, i.e. the
derivation mechanism doesn't create a new device in this case.
Previously, this test was usually passed, but only due to two different
kind of flaws:
1. The test covers only a single level of derivation (and back)
It derives device Y from device X and then Y back to the type of X and
checks whether the result matches X.
What it doesn't check for, are longer chains of derivation like:
CUDA1 > OpenCL2 > CUDA3 and then back to OpenCL4
In that case, the second derivation returns the first device (CUDA3 ==
CUDA1), but when deriving OpenCL4, hwcontext.c was creating a new
OpenCL4 context instead of returning OpenCL2, because there was no link
from CUDA1 to OpenCL2 (only backwards from OpenCL2 to CUDA1)
If the test would check for two levels of derivation, it would have
failed.
This patch fixes those (yet untested) cases by introducing forward
references (derived_device) in addition to the existing back references
(source_device).
2. hwcontext_qsv didn't properly set the source_device
In case of QSV, hwcontext_qsv creates a source context internally
(vaapi, dxva2 or d3d11va) without calling av_hwdevice_ctx_create_derived
and without setting source_device.
This way, the hwcontext test ran successful, but what practically
happened, was that - for example - deriving vaapi from qsv didn't return
the original underlying vaapi device and a new one was created instead:
Exactly what the test is intended to detect and prevent. It just
couldn't do so, because the original device was hidden (= not set as the
source_device of the QSV device).
This patch properly makes these setting and fixes all derivation
scenarios.
(at a later stage, /libavutil/tests/hwdevice should be extended to check
longer derivation chains as well)
Reviewed-by: Lynne <dev@lynne.ee>
Reviewed-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Tested-by: Wenbin Chen <wenbin.chen@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: softworkz <softworkz@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Haihao Xiang <haihao.xiang@intel.com>
This allows for users who derive devices to set options for the
new device context they derive.
The main use case of this is to allow users to enable extensions
(such as surface drawing extensions) in Vulkan while deriving from
the device their frames are on. That way, users don't need to write
any initialization code themselves, since the Vulkan spec invalidates
mixing instances, physical devices and active devices.
Apart from Vulkan, other hwcontexts ignore the opts argument since they
don't support options at all (or in VAAPI and OpenCL's case, options are
currently only used for device selection, which device_derive overrides).
This commit adds the necessary code to initialize and use a Vulkan device
within the hwcontext libavutil framework.
Currently direct mapping to VAAPI and DRM frames is functional, and
transfers to CUDA and native frames are supported.
Lets hope the future Vulkan video decode extension fits well within this
framework.
To be used with the new d3d11 hwaccel decode API.
With the new hwaccel API, we don't want surfaces to depend on the
decoder (other than the required dimension and format). The old D3D11VA
pixfmt uses ID3D11VideoDecoderOutputView pointers, which include the
decoder configuration, and thus is incompatible with the new hwaccel
API. This patch introduces AV_PIX_FMT_D3D11, which uses ID3D11Texture2D
and an index. It's simpler and compatible with the new hwaccel API.
The introduced hwcontext supports only the new pixfmt.
Frame upload code untested.
Significantly based on work by Steve Lhomme <robux4@gmail.com>, but with
heavy changes/rewrites.
Merges Libav commit fff90422d1.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
Use the flags argument of av_hwframe_ctx_create_derived() to pass the
mapping flags which will be used on allocation. Also, set the format
and hardware context on the allocated frame automatically - the user
should not be required to do this themselves.
(cherry picked from commit c5714b51aa)
Some frames contexts are not usable without additional format-specific
state in hwctx. This change adds new functions frames_derive_from and
frames_derive_to to initialise this state appropriately when deriving
a frames context which will require it to be set.
(cherry picked from commit 27978155bc)
To be used with the new d3d11 hwaccel decode API.
With the new hwaccel API, we don't want surfaces to depend on the
decoder (other than the required dimension and format). The old D3D11VA
pixfmt uses ID3D11VideoDecoderOutputView pointers, which include the
decoder configuration, and thus is incompatible with the new hwaccel
API. This patch introduces AV_PIX_FMT_D3D11, which uses ID3D11Texture2D
and an index. It's simpler and compatible with the new hwaccel API.
The introduced hwcontext supports only the new pixfmt.
Frame upload code untested.
Significantly based on work by Steve Lhomme <robux4@gmail.com>, but with
heavy changes/rewrites.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
This adds tons of code for no other benefit than making VideoToolbox
support conform with the new hwaccel API (using hw_device_ctx and
hw_frames_ctx).
Since VideoToolbox decoding does not actually require the user to
allocate frames, the new code does mostly nothing.
One benefit is that ffmpeg_videotoolbox.c can be dropped once generic
hwaccel support for ffmpeg.c is merged from Libav.
Does not consider VDA or VideoToolbox encoding.
Fun fact: the frame transfer functions are copied from vaapi, as the
mapping makes copying generic boilerplate. Mapping itself is not
exported by the VT code, because I don't know how to test.
Use the flags argument of av_hwframe_ctx_create_derived() to pass the
mapping flags which will be used on allocation. Also, set the format
and hardware context on the allocated frame automatically - the user
should not be required to do this themselves.
Some frames contexts are not usable without additional format-specific
state in hwctx. This change adds new functions frames_derive_from and
frames_derive_to to initialise this state appropriately when deriving
a frames context which will require it to be set.
Adds the new av_hwframe_map() function, which allows mapping between
hardware frames and normal memory, along with internal support for
implementing it.
Also adds av_hwframe_ctx_create_derived(), for creating a hardware
frames context associated with one device using frames mapped from
another by some hardware-specific means.