Use the appropriate metadata filter for each codec - in the absence of any
options to modify the stream, the output bitstream should be identical to
the input (though the output file may differ in padding).
All tests use conformance bitstreams, the MPEG-2 streams are newly added
from the conformance test streams
<http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_IEC_13818-4_2004_Conformance_Testing/Video/>
This can be useful to filter out noise in known-broken scenarios like
miscompilation by legacy compilers and similar.
Originally based on a patch by Diego Biurrun.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
Restore alphabetical order in lists, break overly long lines, do some
prettyprinting, add some explanatory section comments, group parts
together that belong together logically.
It provides the following features:
* verify correctness by comparing output to the C version.
* detect failure to save and restore clobbered callee-saved registers.
* detect 32-bit parameters being used as if they were 64-bit in x86-64
(the upper halves are not guaranteed to be zero - but in practice
they very often are, which makes those bugs hard to spot otherwise).
* easy benchmarking.
Compile by running 'make checkasm'.
Execute by running 'tests/checkasm/checkasm'.
Optional arguments are '--bench' to run benchmarks for all functions,
'--bench=<pattern>' to run benchmarks for all functions that starts with
<pattern>, and '<integer>' to seed the PRNG for reproducible results.
Contains unit tests for most h264pred functions to get started, more tests
can be added afterwards using those as a reference.
Loosely based on code from x264. Currently only supports x86 and x86-64,
but additional architectures shouldn't be too much of an obstacle to add.
Note that functions with floating point parameters or floating point
return values are not supported. Some compiler-specific features or
preprocessor hacks would likely be required to add support for that.
Signed-off-by: Janne Grunau <janne-libav@jannau.net>
The new reference.pnm is a freely licensed replacement. The photo has
been taken by Reinhard Tartler on August 28 2014, and is licensed under
the expat license as stated at http://www.jclark.com/xml/copying.txt
This makes the default of '1' more explicit than defaulting to '1' in
fate-run.sh and regression-funcs.sh if THREADS is not set.
Fixes the reported thread count in fate-cpu if THREADS is not set.
Initial implementation by Andrew D'Addesio <modchipv12@gmail.com> during
GSoC 2012.
Completion by Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>, sponsored by the
Mozilla Corporation.
Further contributions by:
Christophe Gisquet <christophe.gisquet@gmail.com>
Janne Grunau <janne-libav@jannau.net>
Luca Barbato <lu_zero@gentoo.org>
Only check dependencies if invoking the make targets 'check'
or anything matching 'fate%' except 'fate-rsync'.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
If building out of tree, make sure the filter scripts are copied
into the build tree before running tests. This makes sure that
SRC_PATH doesn't need to exist on the remote system (or doesn't
need to exist at the same path).
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
The gcov/lcov are a common toolchain for visualizing code coverage with
the GNU/Toolchain. The documentation and implementation of this
integration was heavily inspired from the blog entry by Mike Melanson:
http://multimedia.cx/eggs/using-lcov-with-ffmpeg/
This causes make to exit with an error message if a nonexistent
dependency is specified rather than silently dropping the test.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>