This reverts commit 5258f64a14.
The premise of said commit (that conversions from pointer to int
are ok) is wrong: C99/C11 6.3.2.3 5: "Any pointer type may be converted
to an integer type. [...] If the result cannot be represented in the
integer type, the behavior is undefined." (C90 6.3.4 contains a similar
restriction.) So don't disable -Wpointer-to-int-cast.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
The following command is on how to apply vflip_vulkan filter:
ffmpeg -init_hw_device vulkan -i input.264 -vf hwupload=extra_hw_frames=16,vflip_vulkan,hwdownload,format=yuv420p output.264
Signed-off-by: Wu Jianhua <jianhua.wu@intel.com>
The following command is on how to apply hflip_vulkan filter:
ffmpeg -init_hw_device vulkan -i input.264 -vf hwupload=extra_hw_frames=16,hflip_vulkan,hwdownload,format=yuv420p output.264
Signed-off-by: Wu Jianhua <jianhua.wu@intel.com>
It's got a much better API that's actually maintained, it eliminates
race conditions, it comes with a pkg-config file by default, and
unfortunately isn't currently packaged by Debian or other large
distributions.
This commit adds a powerful and customizable gblur Vulkan filter,
which provides a maximum 127x127 kernel size of Gaussian Filter.
The size could be adjusted by requirements on quality or performance.
The following command is on how to apply gblur_vulkan filter:
ffmpeg -init_hw_device vulkan -i input.264 -vf hwupload=extra_hw_frames=16,gblur_vulkan,hwdownload,format=yuv420p output.264
Signed-off-by: Wu Jianhua <jianhua.wu@intel.com>
This filter conceptually maps the libplacebo `pl_renderer` API into
libavfilter, which is a high-level image rendering API designed to work
with an RGB pipeline internally. As such, there's no way to avoid e.g.
chroma interpolation with this filter, although new versions of
libplacebo support outputting back to subsampled YCbCr after processing
is done.
That being said, `pl_renderer` supports automatic integration of the
majority of libplacebo's shaders, ranging from debanding to tone
mapping, and also supports loading custom mpv-style user shaders, making
this API a natural candidate for getting a lot of functionality out of
relatively little code.
In the future, I may approach this problem either by rewriting this
filter to also support a non-renderer codepath, or by upgrading
libplacebo's renderer to support a full YCbCr pipeline.
This unfortunately requires a very new version of libplacebo (unreleased
at time of writing) for timeline semaphore support. But the amount of
boilerplate needed to hack in backwards compatibility would have been
very unreasonable.
Finally, this is as close to usable as it gets for glslang.
Much faster to compile as well, and eliminates the need for a C++
compiler, which is great.
Also, changes to the resource limits won't break users, as we
can use designated initializers in C90.
OpenBSD only supports riscv64 but this is an attempt at adding
some of the initial bits for RISC-V support.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Some packages may not define custom cflags, in which case a simple
"pkg-config --cflags" call will return an empty string.
This change will be useful to get a valid include path that can be
used in library checks.
Reviewed-by: Haihao Xiang <haihao.xiang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
If no --cpu= option was passed to configure, we detect what the
compiler defaults to. This detected value was then fed back to the
rest of the configure logic, as if it was an explicit choice.
This breaks on Ubuntu 21.10 with GCC 11.1.
Since GCC 8, it's possible to add configure extra features via the
-march option, like e.g. -march=armv7-a+neon. If the -mfpu= option
is configured to default to 'auto', the fpu setting gets taken
from the -march option.
GCC 11.1 in Ubuntu seems to be configured to use -mfpu=auto. This
has the effect of breaking any compilation command that specifies
-march=armv7-a, because the driver implicitly also adds -mfloat-abi=hard,
and that combination results in this error:
cc1: error: ‘-mfloat-abi=hard’: selected processor lacks an FPU
One can compile successfully by passing e.g. -march=armv7-a+fp.
Therefore, restructure configure. If no specific preference was set
(and the 'cpu' configure variable was set as the output of
probe_arm_arch), the value we tried to set via -march= was the same
value that we just tried to detect as the compiler default.
So instead, just try to detect what the compiler defaults to, with
to allow setting other configure settings (such as 'fast_unaligned'),
but don't try to spell out the compiler's default via the -march flag.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
After standardizing the use of 'pxor' in commit 'ebedd26', FFmpeg
build failed with upstream compiler, for 'pxor' is not supported
in time. This patch helps to workaround the build failure by
checking whether 'pxor' is supported during configuration, if not,
MMI will be disabled.
Reviewed-by: yinshiyou-hf@loongson.cn
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Adds schema validation for ffprobe XML output so that updating the
ffprobe.xsd file upon changes to ffprobe is not forgotten. This was
suggested by Marton Balint in:
http://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2021-March/278428.html
The schema FATE test is only run if xmllint command is available.
Signed-off-by: Tobias Rapp <t.rapp@noa-archive.com>
We already require X264_BUILD >= 118, which includes an unconditional
definition of X264_CSP_BGR in itself, thus making this check
effectively always true.
This makes the libx264rgb check work when pkg-config is utilized
and x264.h is not part of the standard include path (as is often
with cross-compilation, or when you just have a custom prefix in
general in f.ex. your home directory).
The X264_BUILD >= 118 required by configure since 2011 should have
X264_CSP_BGR defined unconditionally (it was added a few X264_BUILD
updates earlier), but as 134cba728b
added this additional check, I have kept it for now.
Instead use --preprocessor-arg; in binutils 2.36, the --preprocessor
flag was changed so that it no longer accepts a string containing
multiple arguments, but the whole --preprocessor argument is
treated as the path to the preprocessor executable (where the path
can contain spaces).
It's currently unclear whether this behaviour will stay or if it
is going to be reverted in the future, see discussion at [1]. Just
to be safe, avoid using the --preprocessor argument. Don't redeclare
the full preprocessing command, but just add the $(CC_DEPFLAGS) options.
Based on a patch by Kyle Schwartz.
[1] https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=27594
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>