Otherwise nasm writes the full host-specific paths into .o
output, which breaks binary reproducibility.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kanavin <alex.kanavin@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
This is by definition the appropriate place for it.
Remove all the now unnecessary libavcodec/internal.h inclusions;
also remove other unnecessary headers from the affected files.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
avpriv_find_start_code() supports non-contiguous buffers
by maintaining a state that allows to find start codes
that span across multiple buffers; a consequence thereof
is that avpriv_find_start_code() is given a zero-sized
buffer, it does not modify this state, so that it appears
as if a start code was found if the state contained a start code.
This can e.g. happen with Sequence End units in MPEG-2 and
to counter this, cbs_mpeg2_split_fragment() reset the state
when it has already encountered the end of the fragment
in order to add the last unit (if it is only of the form 00 00 01 xy)
only once; it also used a flag to set whether this is the final unit.
Yet this can be improved by simply resetting state unconditionally
(thereby avoiding a branch); the flag can be removed by just checking
whether we have a valid start code (of the next unit to add)
at the end.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Use -1 as the position in ff_cbs_insert_unit_data()
which implicitly reuses frag->nb_units as the counter.
Also switch to a do-while-loop, as it is more natural
than a for-loop now that the counter is gone.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Use -1 as the position in ff_cbs_insert_unit_data()
which implicitly reuses frag->nb_units as the counter.
Also switch to a do-while-loop, as it is more natural
than a for-loop now that the counter is gone.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
getauxval is marginally faster, and works even when procfs is not mounted
support on Linux was added in glibc 2.16
support on Android was added in 4.4 (API 20)
fixes#6578
Signed-off-by: Aman Karmani <aman@tmm1.net>
This commit does some refactoring to make defining assembly codelets
smaller, and fixes compiler redefinition warnings. It also allows
for other assembly versions to reuse the same boilerplate code as
x86.
Finally, it also adds the out_of_place flag to all assembly codelets.
This changes nothing, as out-of-place operation was assumed to be
available anyway, but this makes it more explicit.
Users should switch to the superior AVFifo API.
Unfortunately AVFifoBuffer fields cannot be marked as deprecated because
it would trigger a warning wherever fifo.h is #included, due to
inlined av_fifo_peek2().
Many AVFifoBuffer users operate on fixed-size elements (e.g. pointers),
but the current FIFO API deals exclusively in bytes, requiring extra
complexity in all these callers.
Add a new AVFifo API creating a FIFO with an element size
that may be larger than a byte. All operations on such a FIFO then
operate on complete elements.
This API does not reuse AVFifoBuffer and its API at all, but instead uses
an opaque struct called AVFifo. The AVFifoBuffer API will be deprecated
in a future commit once all of its users have been switched to the new
API.
Not reusing AVFifoBuffer also allowed to use the full range of size_t
from the beginning.
The API currently allows creating FIFOs up to
- UINT_MAX: av_fifo_alloc(), av_fifo_realloc(), av_fifo_grow()
- SIZE_MAX: av_fifo_alloc_array()
However the usable limit is determined by
- rndx/wndx being uint32_t
- av_fifo_[size,space] returning int
so no FIFO should be larger than the smallest of
- INT_MAX
- UINT32_MAX
- SIZE_MAX
(which should be INT_MAX an all commonly used platforms).
Return an error on trying to allocate FIFOs larger than this limit.
Avoids code duplication. It furthermore properly checks
for buf_size to be > 0 before doing anything.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This reduces sibilance distortion when sibilance and bass are
present at the same time. Bringing the protection of high
frequencies up to about the same level as for low frequencies
should also make the quality less dependent on the frequency
balance of the playback system.
Signed-off-by: Jason Jang <jcj83429@gmail.com>