These functions were true duplicates of functions present in the
generic code. This fixes some of the link errors when building
with --enable-shared --enable-pic.
Change-Id: Idff26599d510d954e439207883607ad6b74df20c
These functions made global references but did not set up the GOT,
causing compilation failures in PIC mode.
Change-Id: Iac473bf46733f87eb2e001cd736af4acf73fa51d
Requiring the output file to be specified with the -o option opens up
the possibility of supporting multiple input files in the future.
Change-Id: I14c9b75e9b21184b47081e1ccf30cf4c91315964
This patch reworks the default behavior of the tool to output Y4M
instead of writing individual raw frames. The relevant controls are
now:
--yv12, --i420 - These options change the output format to be
raw planar data. The output will be Y4M unless
one of these options is specified.
--flipuv - Swaps the chroma planes. Works with Y4M output.
-o, --output - Sets the output filename. Defaults to stdout if
not specified. Supports escape character
expansion for frame width (%w) height (%h) and
sequence number (%1..%9). The --prefix option
has been removed in favor of this escape
expansion.
Since the output defaults to stdout if -o is not specified, an
error will be thrown if stdout is not connected to a pipe. This
can be overridden by specifying '-o -'.
Change-Id: I94e42c57ca75721fdd57a6129e79bcdb2afe5d4d
When showing the command usage information for vpxenc and vpxdec,
options with both a short and long version that do not take an
argument were not properly aligned.
Change-Id: I8d65b5ab85bcb5a5dc8bc0d4b293b5189d56dedb
The new WebM output support should be preferred to IVF, but we can't
change the default behavior of the ivf* tools. There are a few other
default behaviors for these tools that are counterintuitive for
historical reasons, and changing the binary name provides the
opportunity to clean those up as well. This patch takes the first
step by renaming the binaries.
Change-Id: I647008ae37cc352dd27ec1da7ed13489e0609b24
This patch adds the --webm option, to allow the creation of WebM streams
without having to remux ivf into webm.
Change-Id: Ief93c114a6913c55a04cf51bce38f594372d0ad0
Initial import of the libmkv directory from the webmquicktime[1]
project, at commit fedbda1.
[1]: git://review.webmproject.org/webmquicktime.git
commit fedbda18de899ff94855cb334de7e471036fbf1d
Change-Id: I1564a0ebfa72293fc296ee02178196530dfd90e4
Ivfenc will use timebase if it is set. If it is not set ivfenc will
still double the timebase so altref frames will have a unique pts.
Patch Set #3: Use integer math to generate source pts. Added a
framerate parameter. Increased the default timebase to milliseconds to
remove the *2 everywhere.
Change-Id: I8d25b5b2cb26deef7eb72d74b5f76c98cafaf4db
The width and height needed to write the Y4M header can be found by
probing the stream with vpx_codec_peek_stream_info(). This also
has the consequence of supporting multiple codecs from raw files
with automatic detections, should we add additional codecs in the
future.
Change-Id: I7522a8f4c7577b6ed9876d744c59cd86d30c6049
This patch enables ivfdec to decode WebM files. WebM demuxing is
provided by the Matthew Gregan's Nestegg library.
This patch also makes minor changes to the timebase->framerate
handling when doing Y4M output. For WebM files, the framerate is
guessed by looking at the first second of video. For IVF files,
the timebase=1/(2*fps) hack is still in place, but is only used
if the timebase denominator is less than 1000. This is in anticipation
of change I8d25b5b, which introduces the distinction between
framerate and timebase to ivfenc. In the case of high resolution
timebases, like 100ns, we would have to guess the framerate
like we do for WebM, but since WebM support in ivfenc will
deprecate IVF output, we just assume 30fps rather than writing the
lookahead code.
Change-Id: I1dd8600f13bf6071533d2816f005da9ede4f60a2
Postproc level that uses Bresenham's line algorithm
to draw motion vectors onto the postproc buffer.
Change-Id: I34c7daa324f2bdfee71e84fcb1c50b90fa06f6fb
Solaris 10 requires -lposix4 to build successfully on gcc. I only have a
Sparc machine to test with on Solaris 10, but this change leaves
OpenSolaris x86 in a usable state w/ gnu-generic.
I am of the belief that this change should fix Solaris 10 on Sparc, but
will leave other Solaris architectures as is. If someone has an x86
Solaris 10 machine to test on, they may add x86-solaris-gcc to
libvpx/configure and give it a go.
Change-Id: I17a282028bb4d3e9fd8764159f95665160f7b62a
cppcheck found a leaked file descriptor in the debugging code
enabled by defining ENTROPY_STATS. Fixes issue #60.
Change-Id: I0c1d0669cb94d44fed77860f97b82763be06b7cb
Fix out-of-tree builds using NASM. NASM expects its include paths to
have a trailing slash. These aren't used used when doing in-tree builds
(./configure)
Change-Id: I38d469d15acb1b7e65733a2e5ca8c9d86fa4ad86
there were four versions for the regular and
macroblock loopfilters:
horizontal [y|uv]
vertical [y|uv]
this moves all the common code into 2 functions:
vp8_loop_filter_neon
vp8_mbloop_filter_neon
this provides no gain in performance. there's a bit
of jitter, but it trends down ~0.25-0.5%. however,
this is a huge gain maintenance. also, there is the
potential to drop some stack usage in the macroblock
loopfilter.
Change-Id: I91506f07d2f449631ff67ad6f1b3f3be63b81a92
The primary goal is to allow a binary to be built which supports
NEON, but can fall back to non-NEON routines, since some Android
devices do not have NEON, even if they are otherwise ARMv7 (e.g.,
Tegra).
The configure-generated flags HAVE_ARMV7, etc., are used to decide
which versions of each function to build, and when
CONFIG_RUNTIME_CPU_DETECT is enabled, the correct version is chosen
at run time.
In order for this to work, the CFLAGS must be set to something
appropriate (e.g., without -mfpu=neon for ARMv7, and with
appropriate -march and -mcpu for even earlier configurations), or
the native C code will not be able to run.
The ASFLAGS must remain set for the most advanced instruction set
required at build time, since the ARM assembler will refuse to emit
them otherwise.
I have not attempted to make any changes to configure to do this
automatically.
Doing so will probably require the addition of new configure options.
Many of the hooks for RTCD on ARM were already there, but a lot of
the code had bit-rotted, and a good deal of the ARM-specific code
is not integrated into the RTCD structs at all.
I did not try to resolve the latter, merely to add the minimal amount
of protection around them to allow RTCD to work.
Those functions that were called based on an ifdef at the calling
site were expanded to check the RTCD flags at that site, but they
should be added to an RTCD struct somewhere in the future.
The functions invoked with global function pointers still are, but
these should be moved into an RTCD struct for thread safety (I
believe every platform currently supported has atomic pointer
stores, but this is not guaranteed).
The encoder's boolhuff functions did not even have _c and armv7
suffixes, and the correct version was resolved at link time.
The token packing functions did have appropriate suffixes, but the
version was selected with a define, with no associated RTCD struct.
However, for both of these, the only armv7 instruction they actually
used was rbit, and this was completely superfluous, so I reworked
them to avoid it.
The only non-ARMv4 instruction remaining in them is clz, which is
ARMv5 (not even ARMv5TE is required).
Considering that there are no ARM-specific configs which are not at
least ARMv5TE, I did not try to detect these at runtime, and simply
enable them for ARMv5 and above.
Finally, the NEON register saving code was completely non-reentrant,
since it saved the registers to a global, static variable.
I moved the storage for this onto the stack.
A single binary built with this code was tested on an ARM11 (ARMv6)
and a Cortex A8 (ARMv7 w/NEON), for both the encoder and decoder,
and produced identical output, while using the correct accelerated
functions on each.
I did not test on any earlier processors.
Change-Id: I45cbd63a614f4554c3b325c45d46c0806f009eaa
The code was not checking for frame sizes smaller than 3 bytes, and the
partition size checks might have failed if the input buffer was within
16MB of the top of the heap.
In addition, the reference count on the current frame buffer was not
being decremented on error, so after a small number of errors, no new
frame buffer could be found and it would run off the list of them.
Change-Id: I0c60dba6adb1e2a29df39754f72a56ab6c776b46
Most of the code that actually uses these matrices indexes them as
if they were a single contiguous array, and coverity produces
reports about the resulting accesses that overflow the static
bounds of the first row.
This is perfectly legal in C, but converting them to actual [16]
arrays should eliminate the report, and removes a good deal of
extraneous indexing and address operators from the code.
Change-Id: Ibda479e2232b3e51f9edf3b355b8640520fdbf23
Change the pts of the altref frame to be as close as possible to the
pts of the preceding frame and still be strictly increasing.
Change-Id: Iae3033a4c89ae5a9d0e5c4198e9196e5f3ee57c7
The first implementation of the firstpass motion map for motion
compensated temporal filtering created a file, fpmotionmap.stt,
in the current working directory. This was not safe for multiple
encoder instances. This patch merges this data into the first pass
stats packet interface, so that it is handled like the other
(numerical) firstpass stats.
The new stats packet is defined as follows:
Numerical Stats (16 doubles) -- 128 bytes
Motion Map -- 1 byte / Macroblock
Padding -- to align packet to 8 bytes
The fpmotionmap.stt file can still be generated for debugging
purposes in the same way that the textual version of the stats
are available (defining OUTPUT_FPF in firstpass.c)
Change-Id: I083ffbfd95e7d6a42bb4039ba0e81f678c8183ca
x86-64 passes most arguments in registers. There is no need to
push them to the stack before using them.
Change-Id: I13c683f1358782682ecafaf1df3fb0af23b978ea
This rewriting reflects changes made in commit "Improve the
accuracy of forward walsh-hadamard transform". Since this function
is not called much, only a small encoder performance gain (~0.5% )
is seen.
Change-Id: Ie9df58a43028a11fd5b115c4bbe3141f7596578b
Instead of doing 8-bit data unpack and 16-bit subtraction, use
psubb to do 16 8-bit subtractions and pcmpgtb to preserve the
sign information. This does not bring noticable gain since
these functions are not called frequently.
Change-Id: I90a0dfaa3db9d422e4ada324076596ffb178548e
generic version got fixed, but not the arm version. fixes:
vp8/encoder/arm/mcomp_arm.c: In function 'vp8_full_search_sadx3':
vp8/encoder/arm/mcomp_arm.c:1208: warning: pointer targets in passing
argument 5 of 'fn_ptr->sdx3f' differ in signedness
vp8/encoder/arm/mcomp_arm.c:1208: note: expected 'unsigned int *' but
argument is of type 'int *'
and another unsigned change to keep the files similar
Change-Id: I1b6255dc3a03b90394a791ee0d15d8167d9454db
vp8_diamond_search_sadx4 isn't used in arm because there is no
corrosponding sdx4df as in x86. rather than keep it in sync with
../mcomp.c, delete it
vp8_hex_search had the original, more readable/understandable code if`d
out. it's also available in ../mcomp.c, so remove the dead copy
Change-Id: Ia42aa6e23b3a2e88040f467280befec091ec080e
when a subsequent frame is encoded as an alt reference frame, it is
unlikely that any mb in current frame will be used as reference for
future frames, so we can enable quantization optimization even when
the RD constant is slightly rate-biased. The change has an overall
benefit between 0.1% to 0.2% bit savings on the test sets based on
vpxssim scores.
Change-Id: I9aa7bc5cd573ea84e3ee655d2834c18c4460ceea