As long as WelsFileHandle* is equal to FILE* this doesn't matter,
but for consistency use the WelsF* functions for all handles
opened by WelsFopen, and use WelsFileHandle* as type for it
instead of FILE*.
Both encoder and decoder versions were functionally equivalent,
but I picked the decoder version (but added the static inline
keywords to it) since the encoder one was quite messy with a lot
of commented out code.
Instead of using "defined(MSC_VER) || defined(__MINGW32__)" to
indicate the windows platform, just check for the _WIN32 define
instead.
Also remove an unused codepath - the removed codepath would
only be used under the condition
"(defined(MSC_VER) || defined(__MINGW32__)) && !defined(_WIN32)",
and I'm not aware of any environment with MSVC or MinGW that
doesn't define _WIN32, thus this codepath never was used.
The following pattern is unsafe on all platforms:
n = SNPRINTF(buf, ...);
buf[n] = '\0';
On windows, the _snprintf variants return a negative number
if the buffer was too small, thus buf[n] would be outside
of (before the start of) the buffer.
On other platforms, the C99 snprintf function returns the
total number of characters which would have been written if
the buffer had been large enough, which can be larger than
the buffer size itself, and thus buf[n] would be beyond the
end of the buffer.
The C99 snprintf function always null terminate the buffer.
These invocations of SNPRINTF are within !WIN32, so we can
be sure that the SNPRINTF call itself already null terminated
the buffer.
The decoder used WelsMedian while the encoder used WELS_MEDIAN.
The former has two different implementations, WELS_MEDIAN was
identical to the disabled version of WelsMedian.
Settle on using the same implementation for both decoder and
encoder - whichever version of the implementations is faster
should be used for both.
All functions that are assigned to function pointers with this
typedef (WelsHadamardQuant2x2Skip_c and WelsHadamardQuant2x2Skip_mmx)
use int32_t instead of BOOL_T for the return value.
bundleloader.h, which is included if MACOS is defined, defines
inline functions that reference bundle loading system functions,
which requires linking to the core foundation framework.
Avoid requiring linking to extra libraries/frameworks if
NO_DYNAMIC_VP is defined.