Code mostly inspired by vp8's MC, however:
- its MMX2 horizontal filter is worse because it can't take advantage of
the coefficient redundancy
- that same coefficient redundancy allows better code for non-SSSE3 versions
Benchmark (rounded to tens of unit):
V8x8 H8x8 2D8x8 V16x16 H16x16 2D16x16
C 445 358 985 1785 1559 3280
MMX* 219 271 478 714 929 1443
SSE2 131 158 294 425 515 892
SSSE3 120 122 248 387 390 763
End result is overall around a 15% speedup for SSSE3 version (on 6 sequences);
all loop filter functions now take around 55% of decoding time, while luma MC
dsp functions are around 6%, chroma ones are 1.3% and biweight around 2.3%.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
This adds a hand-optimized assembly version for get_cabac much like the
existing one, but it works if the table offsets are RIP-relative.
Compared to the non-RIP-relative version this adds 2 lea instructions
and it needs one extra register.
There is a surprisingly large performance improvement over the c version (more
so than the generated assembly seems to suggest) just in get_cabac, I measured
roughly 40% faster for get_cabac on a K8. However, overall the difference is
not that big, I measured roughly 5% on a test clip on a K8 and a Core2.
Hopefully it still compiles on x86 32bit...
Now that only one table is used, there's some chance even darwin as compiles
this (apparently the label arithmetic used previously doesn't work if it
involves symbols defined in a different file, thanks to Ronald S. Bultje for
helping me with this).
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The reason is this is easier for PIC code (in particular on darwin...).
Keep the old names as pointers (static in cabac_functions.h so gcc
knows these are just immediate offsets) so the c code can nicely stay the same
(alternatively could use offsets directly in the functions needing the
tables). This should produce the same code as before with non-pic and better
code (confirmed) with pic.
The assembly uses the new table but still won't work for PIC case.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This adds a hand-optimized assembly version for get_cabac much like the
existing one, but it works if the table offsets are RIP-relative.
Compared to the non-RIP-relative version this adds 2 lea instructions
and it needs one extra register. get_cabac() gets about 40% faster, for
an overall speedup of about 5%.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
The reason is this is easier for PIC code (in particular on darwin...).
Keep the old names as pointers (static in cabac_functions.h so gcc
knows these are just immediate offsets) so the c code can nicely stay the same
(alternatively could use offsets directly in the functions needing the
tables). This should produce the same code as before with non-pic and better
code (confirmed) with pic.
The assembly uses the new table but still won't work for PIC case.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
The new lowres support is limited to decoders where lowres decoding
is possible in high quality.
I was not able to measure any speed difference, but if one is found
the 2-3 lines that might affect speed can be made compile time conditional
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This removes all references to AVCodecContext.dsp_mask and marks
it for eviction at the next version bump. It has been superseded
by av_set_cpu_flag_mask() which, unlike this field, works everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
This adds a hand-optimized assembly version for get_cabac much like the
existing one, but it works if the table offsets are RIP-relative.
Compared to the non-RIP-relative version this adds 2 lea instructions
and it needs one extra register.
There is a surprisingly large performance improvement over the c version (more
so than the generated assembly seems to suggest) just in get_cabac, I measured
roughly 40% faster for get_cabac on a K8. However, overall the difference is
not that big, I measured roughly 5% on a test clip on a K8 and a Core2.
Hopefully it still compiles on x86 32bit...
v2: incorporated feedback from Loren Merritt to avoid rip-relative movs
for every table, and got rid of unnecessary @GOTPCREL.
v3: apply similar fixes to the the decode_significance functions, and use
same macro arguments for non-pic case.
v4: prettify inline asm arguments, add a non-fast-cmov version (as I expect
the c code to be faster otherwise since both cmov and sbb suck hard on a
Prescott, even can't construct the mask with a 64bit shift as that's just as
terrible - it's quite difficult to find usable instructions on that chip...).
This is tested to work but not on a P4, in theory it _should_ be fast there.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Recent register allocation changes (x86inc.asm update) changed the
register order and thus opcodes for the inner loops. One of them became
>128bytes, which confuses other parts of this function where it jumps
to fixed-offset positions to extend the edge by fixed amounts. A simple
register change fixes this.
Add support for all x86-64 registers
Prefer caller-saved register over callee-saved on WIN64
Support up to 15 function arguments
Also (by Ronald S. Bultje)
Fix up our asm to work with new x86inc.asm.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Justin Ruggles <justin.ruggles@gmail.com>
Quite often, the original weights are multiple of 512. By prescaling them
by 1/512 when they are computed (once per frame), no intermediate shifting
is needed, and no prescaling on each call either.
The x86 code already used that trick.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
Prevents a signflip in the counter, and a subsequent crash because of
overreads/overwrites.
Found-by: Mateusz "j00ru" Jurczyk and Gynvael Coldwind
CC: libav-stable@libav.org