In the GNU assembler, a relational expression, bizarrely, has the
value -1 if true, whereas in Apple's it is +1. This patch makes
sure the correct expression is used in both cases.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
The clang integrated assembler does not support pre-UAL syntax,
while gcc requires pre-UAL syntax for ARM code. A patch[1] for
clang to support the old syntax as well has been ignored since
January.
This patch chooses the syntax appropriate for each compiler,
allowing both to build the code. Notably, this change allows
building for iphone with the latest Apple Xcode update.
[1] http://llvm.org/bugs/show_bug.cgi?id=11855
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
* qatar/master:
vc1dec: Remove separate scaling function for interlaced field MVs
vc1dec: Invoke edge_emulation regardless of MV precision
x86: Use consistent 3dnowext function and macro name suffixes
g723_1: scale output as supposed for the case with postfilter disabled
g723_1: increase excitation storage by 4
g723_1: fix upper bound parameter from inverse maximum autocorrelation
g723_1: make scale_vector() behave like the reference
g723_1: fix off-by-one error in normalize_bits()
g723_1: save/restore excitation with offset to store LPC history
wmapro: prevent division by zero when sample rate is unspecified
x86: proresdsp: improve SIGNEXTEND macro comments
x86: h264dsp: K&R formatting cosmetics
LICENSE: Document all GPL files
Conflicts:
libavcodec/g723_1.c
libavcodec/wmaprodec.c
libavcodec/x86/h264dsp_mmx.c
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Refactoring mmx2/mmxext YASM code with cpuflags will force renames.
So switching to a consistent naming scheme beforehand is sensible.
The name "mmxext" is more official and widespread and also the name
of the CPU flag, as reported e.g. by the Linux kernel.
OpenJPEG doesn't have a particular limit
Signed-off-by: Michael Bradshaw <mbradshaw@sorensonmedia.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
For left HFYU prediction, we predict from the buffer buf+1 using 8- or
16-byte reads. This means that aligning the buffer by 16 bytes is in
itself not sufficient, because if the width itself is 16- or 8-byte
aligned, the buffer will not be padded, and thus a read of size 16 at
buf+1 will overflow boundaries at the right edge. Padding the buffer by
1 byte is sufficient to not overflow its boundaries.
Fixes bug 342.
This makes add_hfyu_left_prediction_sse4() handle sources that are not
16-byte aligned in its own function rather than by proxying the call to
add_hfyu_left_prediction_ssse3(). This fixes a crash on Win64, since the
sse4 version clobberes xmm6, but the ssse3 version (which uses MMX regs)
does not restore it, thus leading to XMM clobbering and RSP being off.
Fixes bug 342.
The scaling process for obtaining direct MVs from co-located field MVs
is the same for interlaced field and progressive pictures.
Signed-off-by: Kostya Shishkov <kostya.shishkov@gmail.com>
In VC-1 interlaced field pictures, chroma motion vectors can extend beyond
picture boundary even if luma vectors are bounded. The problem shows up
only for hpel interpolated MVs, and may be due to the way motion vectors
are scaled / cropped.
Thanks to Konstantin Shishkov for suggesting the fix. This fixes
long-known segfaults in MC-VC1.ts from videolan streams archive.
Signed-off-by: Kostya Shishkov <kostya.shishkov@gmail.com>
Currently there is a wild mix of 3dn2/3dnow2/3dnowext. Switching to
"3dnowext", which is a more common name of the CPU flag, as reported
e.g. by the Linux kernel, unifies this.
Fixed codebook mode in 5300 rate may write up to SUBFRAME_LEN + 4 and
that is considered normal by the reference decoder. Without that additional
padding it might overwrite first elements of LPC history.
The boilerplate states that the files are under LGPL,
but refer the user to the GPL at one place.
These files were (re)implemented specifically for FFmpeg.
Some calculations were changed in b6a3849 to use mmsize, which was not correct
for the AVX version, which uses INIT_YMM and therefore has mmsize == 32.
Fixes Bug 341.
Signed-off-by: Justin Ruggles <justin.ruggles@gmail.com>