This is the initial patch for supporting 1/8th pel
motion. Currently if we configure with enable-high-precision-mv,
all motion vectors would default to 1/8 pel. Encode and
decode syncs fine with the current code. In the next phase
the code will be refactored so that we can choose the 1/8
pel mode adaptively at a frame/segment/mb level.
Derf results:
http://www.corp.google.com/~debargha/vp8_results/enhinterp_hpmv.html
(about 0.83% better than 8-tap interpoaltion)
Patch 3: Rebased. Also adding 1/16th pel interpolation for U and V
Patch 4: HD results.
http://www.corp.google.com/~debargha/vp8_results/enhinterp_hd_hpmv.html
Seems impressive (unless I am doing something wrong).
Patch 5: Added mmx/sse for bilateral filtering, as well as enforced
use of c-versions of subpel filters with 8-taps and 1/16th pel;
Also redesigned the 8-tap filters to reduce the cut-off in order to
introduce a denoising effect. There is a new configure option
sixteenth-subpel-uv which will use 1/16 th pel interpolation for
uv, if the motion vectors have 1/8 pel accuracy.
With the fixes the results are promising on the derf set. The enhanced
interpolation option with 8-taps alone gives 3% improvement over thei
derf set:
http://www.corp.google.com/~debargha/vp8_results/enhinterpn.html
Results on high precision mv and on the hd set are to follow.
Patch 6: Adding a missing condition for CONFIG_SIXTEENTH_SUBPEL_UV in
vp8/common/x86/x86_systemdependent.c
Patch 7: Cleaning up various debug messages.
Patch 8: Merge conflict
Change-Id: I5b1d844457aefd7414a9e4e0e06c6ed38fd8cc04
Prepend idct function names with vp8_
so that under profiling they show up
associated with libvpx.
Change-Id: I4fe357b50236cb7730a4cc00164c0a3487a1d8b4
The data that the simple horizontal loopfilter reads is aligned, treat
it accordingly.
For the vertical, we only use the bottom 4 bytes, so don't read in 16
(and incur the penalty for unaligned access).
This shows a small improvement on older processors which have a
significant penalty for unaligned reads.
postproc_mmx.c is unused
Change-Id: I87b29bbc0c3b19ee1ca1de3c4f47332a53087b3d
Prepend . to local labels in assembly code. This
allows non unique labels within a file. Also
makes profiling information more informative
by keeping the function name with the loop name.
Change-Id: I7a983cb3a5ba2413d5dafd0a37936b268fb9e37f
global values were being referenced, but the GOT was not being set up.
as the GOT is only required for PIC, this issue wasn't caught in the
default configuration.
Change-Id: I8006e53776139362a76f2c80cf9d0f8458602b2f
http://code.google.com/p/webm/issues/detail?id=328
the decision to run the regular or simple loopfilter is made outside the
function and managed with pointers
stop tracking the option in two places. use filter_type exclusively
Change-Id: I39d7b5d1352885efc632c0a94aaf56b72cc2fe15
the win64 abi requires saving and restoring xmm6:xmm15. currently
SAVE_XMM and RESTORE XMM only allow for saving xmm6:xmm7. allow
specifying the highest register used and if the stack is unaligned.
Change-Id: Ica5699622ffe3346d3a486f48eef0206c51cf867
Went through the code and fixed it. Verified on Windows.
Where possible, remove dependencies on xmm[67]
Current code relies on pushing rbp to the stack to get 16 byte
alignment. This broke when rbp wasn't pushed
(vp8/encoder/x86/sad_sse3.asm). Work around this by using unaligned
memory accesses. Revisit this and the offsets in
vp8/encoder/x86/sad_sse3.asm in another change to SAVE_XMM.
Change-Id: I5f940994d3ebfd977c3d68446cef20fd78b07877
vp8_filter_block1d16_h4_ssse3 was never called
because UNSHADOW_ARGS moves the stack by 'mov rsp, rbp', the issue was
masked. however, if/when win64 used those registers for persistant data,
issues could/will arise.
Change-Id: I56d6effca0aeba1f86082689771cb10145d39651
A large number of functions were defined with external linkage, even
though they were only used from within one file. This patch changes
their linkage to static and removes the vp8_ prefix from their names,
which should make it more obvious to the reader that the function is
contained within the current translation unit. Functions that were
not referenced were removed.
These symbols were identified by:
$ nm -A libvpx.a | sort -k3 | uniq -c -f2 | grep ' [A-Z] ' \
| sort | grep '^ *1 '
Change-Id: I59609f58ab65312012c047036ae1e0634f795779
This eliminates a large set of warnings exposed by the Mozilla build
system (Use of C++ comments in ISO C90 source, commas at the end of
enum lists, a couple incomplete initializers, and signed/unsigned
comparisons).
It also eliminates many (but not all) of the warnings expose by newer
GCC versions and _FORTIFY_SOURCE (e.g., calling fread and fwrite
without checking the return values).
There are a few spurious warnings left on my system:
../vp8/encoder/encodemb.c:274:9: warning: 'sz' may be used
uninitialized in this function
gcc seems to be unable to figure out that the value shortcut doesn't
change between the two if blocks that test it here.
../vp8/encoder/onyx_if.c:5314:5: warning: comparison of unsigned
expression >= 0 is always true
../vp8/encoder/onyx_if.c:5319:5: warning: comparison of unsigned
expression >= 0 is always true
This is true, so far as it goes, but it's comparing against an enum, and the C
standard does not mandate that enums be unsigned, so the checks can't be
removed.
Change-Id: Iaf689ae3e3d0ddc5ade00faa474debe73b8d3395
Filed for nasm as:
https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&atid=106208&aid=3081103&group_id=6208
nasm just does not accept any size parameter for movhps:
1.asm:2: error: mismatch in operand sizes
Some parts of libvpx already use MMWORD for movhps and MMWORD is
defined-out so it is compatible both with yasm and nasm.
Provide nasm compatibility. No binary change by this patch with yasm on
{x86_64,i686}-fedora13-linux-gnu.
Change-Id: I4008a317ca87ec07c9ada958fcdc10a0cb589bbc
nasm does not support `label wrt rip', it requires `rel label'. It is
still fully compatible with yasm.
Provide nasm compatibility. No binary change by this patch with yasm on
{x86_64,i686}-fedora13-linux-gnu. Few longer opcodes with nasm on
{x86_64,i686}-fedora13-linux-gnu have been checked as safe.
Change-Id: I488773a4e930a56e43b0cc72d867ee5291215f50
nasm requires the instruction length (movd/movq) to match to its
parameters. I find it more clear to really use 64bit instructions when
we use 64bit registers in the assembly.
Provide nasm compatibility. No binary change by this patch with yasm on
{x86_64,i686}-fedora13-linux-gnu. Few longer opcodes with nasm on
{x86_64,i686}-fedora13-linux-gnu have been checked as safe.
Change-Id: Id9b1a5cdfb1bc05697e523c317a296df43d42a91
- Scheduling for Atom processors
- Combining of macros to allow for better interleaving
- Change from multiplies to adds for main filter
- Use of movhps/movlps to fill xmm registers without
shifting and orring
Change-Id: I0b3500a5f58abf7085253ec92d64c8a96723040b
Movdqu is more expensive (throughput, uops) than movq. Minimal
impact for newer big cores, but ~2.25% gain on Atom.
Change-Id: I62c80bb1cc01d8a91c350c4c7719462809a4ef7f