Currently, if VIS is enabled by configure, it will also be enabled at
run-time regardless of its support in the hardware. Thus, masking VIS
usage as it is done in vis.h by constructing binary instructions is
pointless. Using normal VIS mnemonics in inline assembly allows to take
advantage of automatic register allocation, gets rid of register
variables, which are unsupported by suncc for SPARC, and improves code
readability.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
* qatar/master:
sparc: Eliminate dead code in VIS acceleration macros
flacdec: drop unnecessary assert
mjpegdec: properly report unsupported disabled features
Conflicts:
libavcodec/flacdec.c
libavcodec/mjpegdec.c
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Neither the asm() nor the __asm__() keyword is part of the C99
standard, but while GCC accepts the former in C89 syntax, it is not
accepted in C99 unless GNU extensions are turned on (with -fasm). The
latter form is accepted in any syntax as an extension (without
requiring further command-line options).
Sun Studio C99 compiler also does not accept asm() while accepting
__asm__(), albeit reporting warnings that it's not valid C99 syntax.
Originally committed as revision 15627 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
Consistently apply this rule: the guard name is obtained from the
filename by stripping the leading "lib", converting '/' and '.' to
'_' and uppercasing the resulting name. Guard names in the root
directory have to be prefixed by "FFMPEG_".
Originally committed as revision 15120 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
ported to ffmpeg by (ja2morri at csclub dot uwaterloo dot ca (james morrison))
useable under LGPL with their agreement
Originally committed as revision 3048 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk