These functions are not faster than other mmx implementations on
any hardware I have been able to test on, and they are horribly
inaccurate. There is thus no reason to ever use them.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
This moves all VP3-specific function pointers from dsputil to a
new vp3dsp context. There is no reason to ever use the VP3 IDCT
where an MPEG2 IDCT is expected or vice versa.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
The 32bits targets have been compiled with -mfpmath=sse for proper reference.
sbr_sum_square C /32bits: 82c (unrolled)/102c
C /64bits: 69c (unrolled)/82c
SSE/32bits: 42c
SSE/64bits: 31c
Use of SSE4.1 dpps to perform the final sum is slower.
Not unrolling to perform 8 operations in a loop yields 10 more cycles.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
This will be useful to test more aggressively for failures to mark XMM
registers as clobbered in Win64 builds, and prevent regressions thereof.
Based on a patch by Ramiro Polla <ramiro.polla@gmail.com>
Provide MMX, SSE2 and SSSE3 versions, with a fast-path when the weights are
multiples of 512 (which is often the case when the values round up nicely).
*_TIMER report for the 16x16 and 8x8 cases:
C:
9015 decicycles in 16, 524257 runs, 31 skips
2656 decicycles in 8, 524271 runs, 17 skips
MMX:
4156 decicycles in 16, 262090 runs, 54 skips
1206 decicycles in 8, 262131 runs, 13 skips
MMX on fast-path:
2760 decicycles in 16, 524222 runs, 66 skips
995 decicycles in 8, 524252 runs, 36 skips
SSE2:
2163 decicycles in 16, 262131 runs, 13 skips
832 decicycles in 8, 262137 runs, 7 skips
SSE2 with fast path:
1783 decicycles in 16, 524276 runs, 12 skips
711 decicycles in 8, 524283 runs, 5 skips
SSSE3:
2117 decicycles in 16, 262136 runs, 8 skips
814 decicycles in 8, 262143 runs, 1 skips
SSSE3 with fast path:
1315 decicycles in 16, 524285 runs, 3 skips
578 decicycles in 8, 524286 runs, 2 skips
This means around a 4% speedup for some sequences.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
When decoding coefficients, detect whether the block is DC-only, and take
advantage of this knowledge to perform DC-only inverse transform.
This is achieved by:
- first, changing the 108x4 element modulo_three_table into a 108 element
table (kind of base4), and accessing each value using mask and shifts.
- then, checking low bits for 0 (as they represent the presence of higher
frequency coefficients)
Also provide x86 SIMD code for the DC-only inverse transform.
Signed-off-by: Kostya Shishkov <kostya.shishkov@gmail.com>
Parts are inspired from the 8-bit H.264 predict code in Libav.
Other parts ported from x264 with relicensing permission from author.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
Ports the majority of IDCT functions for 10-bit H.264.
Parts are inspired from 8-bit IDCT code in Libav; other parts ported from x264 with relicensing permission from author.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rbultje@google.com>
This will be beneficial for use with the audio conversion API without
requiring it to depend on all of dsputil.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
h264dsp_mmx.c to h264_idct.asm (as yasm code). Because the loops are now
coded in asm instead of C, this is (depending on the function) up to 50%
faster for cases where gcc didn't do a great job at looping.
Since h264_idct_add8() is now faster than the manual loop setup in h264.c,
in-asm idct calling can now be enabled for chroma as well (see r16207). For
MMX, this is 5% faster. For SSE2 (which isn't done for chroma if h264.c does
the looping), this makes it up to 50% faster. Speed gain overall is ~0.5-1.0%.
Originally committed as revision 25119 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
format), LGPL'ed with permission from Jason and Loren. This includes mmx2
code, so remove inline asm from h264dsp_mmx.c accordingly.
Originally committed as revision 25031 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk