avoids complicated index calculations in the loops.
saves 0.3MHz decoding a 64kbps test file on h300 (cf) and
0.2MHz on c200 (pp)
Change-Id: I1918912d9a4502f89980c6bb270ec2ef10a07010
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
on a target with a disk.
Change-Id: I37c875c9cd014eb61fe5232dab0f4b8f15f057dd
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/319
Tested-by: Thiago Okada <thiago.mast3r@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Frederik Vestre <freqmod@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Frederik Vestre <freqmod@gmail.com>
speeds up decoding of a 64kbps test_file by 1.5MHz on c200 (pp)
and 1.9MHz on fuzev1 (amsv1)
Change-Id: I1db460b634eba608c3e00541d96fc93d5a05710b
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
speeds up decoding of a 64kbps test file by 0.5Hz on h300 (cf)
0.9MHz on c200 (pp) and 0.2MHz on fuzev1 (amsv1)
Change-Id: Ib537c2393fa6dca0b61e4e9f80eef5e688c2c2bd
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Unroll overlap add loop by four and use memcpy for copying
instead of loops.
Change-Id: I17114626a395d5972130251d892f851bc86e3a6a
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Replace complicated macro doing three 16*16 muls and add an inline
asm implementation for arm, speeds up decoding a 64kbps test file
by 0.5MHz on c200 (pp) and gives slightly better precision.
Change-Id: I6fc5b83c210f01bffdc38aec54cc5a8b646d8169
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Hoist load of coefficients out of the loop.
Speeds up decoding of a 64kbps test file by 0.6MHz on h300 (cf)
0.2MHz on c200 (pp) and 0.1MHz on fuzev1 (amsv1)
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Change-Id: I4be0059fc2a77748575f5fc9378f7f348d64f1c4
Skip expensive multiply-accumulate loop when gains are 0 and
just copy using memcpy if soure and destination are not the same
Speeds up decoding of a 64kbps test file by 6MHz on h300 (cf)
7MHz on c200 (pp) and 6MHz on fuzev1 (amsv1)
Change-Id: Ibbc9ddfd45a9ac661467b1327b8c67761924fb8b
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Reorder operands to take advantage of the early termination of
multiplications. Saves 2.5MHz decoding a 64kbps opus test file
on c200 (pp).
Change-Id: I470266dc870ab183ece3b23426d41e2a64342a71
Speeds up decoding of 64kbps test file by 6.3MHz on h300 (cf)
and 1.2MHz on c200 (pp).
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Change-Id: I08c2c332153abcbef9447c81986777fd2fcc73fe
speeds up decoding of 64kbps test file by 19MHz on h300 (cf)
and 2.5MHz on c200 (pp)
Change-Id: Idacd2f8962c20c518055d586daeec6b932b7ded2
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Speeds up decoding of a 64kbps test file 26MHz on H300 (cf) and
2MHz on c200 (pp)
Change-Id: I2fb4fe6c0a29321087e02fbd17fd1b1eb84e7b57
Signed-off-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Remove downsampling code from deemphasis loop as we don't use
it and remove multiplications that are not relevant when
not using custom modes. Saves 1.4MHz on h300 (cf), 4.3MHz on
c200 (pp) and 4.6 on fuzev1 (amsv1).
Change-Id: Iab3f1d737a656a563aaa351d50db987a9cff2287
Saves about 30MHz on h300 (cf) and 1.5MHz on c200 (pp) decoding a
64kbps test file. Stack usage is still below 70%.
Change-Id: Ib13df9011adb4eef4bb91a52e5a32741c8bf8988
Speeds up decoding of a 64kbps opus test file by 34MHz on h300 (cf),
24MHz on c200 (pp) and 13MHz on fuzev1 (amsv1)
Change-Id: I0dce6b3bfe6c81d0a722dfebb13891b9a428c6ba
Synchronised with opus repo on github (https://github.com/freqmod/rockbox-opus)
Status:
* Seeking ported from speex, but fails on some cases (e.g. seek to granule 0)
* ReplayGain parsing needs to be reworked, we do vorbis-style replaygain now.
http://wiki.xiph.org/OggOpus#Comment_Header explicitly forbids these in
favour of R128_TRACK_GAIN tag.
* No optimisation yet, source files still nearly identical to opus upstream
* Multi-stream opus files may not be parsed correctly
Change-Id: Ia66f1027dc1d288083e3c57b2816700078376f9a
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/300
Reviewed-by: Bertrik Sikken <bertrik@sikken.nl>
Tested-by: Bertrik Sikken <bertrik@sikken.nl>
Since gcc 4.4 the MIPS port no longer recognizes the "h" asm constraint.
It was necessary to remove this constraint in order to avoid generating
unpredictable code sequences. We can achieve the same effect using
128-bit types.
See also:GCC 4.4 release notes at http://gcc.gnu.org/gcc-4.4/
Change-Id: I713cdf57cde1a989ad960aa441ab1ccf51f1cdc6
Several of the problem samples on the tracker use values outside this
range. Trying the larger table doesn't quite seem to fix things, but
its only a small amount of additional memory and looking at ffmpeg,
I think the larger table is correct.
Change-Id: Id046e62b68550701aa1f80c9abd0a1dcd711bd0d
No known samples are fixed by this problem, but I haven't tested many.
Backport of ffmpeg revision 26388.
Change-Id: Ife9654b7477a432834e3cab2cb43d16da071445a
It was only needed by the old arm toolchain that we no longer use or support.
Change-Id: Id0e6c67477f8834a637079b03cde5fbf9da68b1c
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/233
Reviewed-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
This would zero the first 4 or 8 bytes of the array because it is declared as a pointer
rockbox/lib/rbcodec/codecs/libasap/asap.c:1229:44: warning: argument to 'sizeof' in 'memset' call is the same expression as the destination; did you mean to provide an explicit length? [-Wsizeof-pointer-memaccess]
memset(ast -> memory, 0, sizeof(ast -> memory));
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~^~~~~~
librbcodec users must provide these two files when the library is built.
rbcodecconfig.h provides configuration #defines and basic types, and
will be included by public librbcodec headers, so it must not conflict
with the user's code. rbcodecplatform.h provides various OS functions,
and will only be included by source files and private headers. This
system is intended to provide maximum flexibility for use on embedded
systems, where no operating system headers are included. Unix systems
can just copy rbcodecconfig-example.h and rbcodecplatform-unix.h with
minimal changes.
Change-Id: I350a2274d173da391fd1ca00c4202e9760d91def
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/143
Reviewed-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Nils Wallménius <nils@rockbox.org>
The LSP feature in WMA requires that the noise table values be
doubled verses when it is not used. Unfortunately, the previous
code would double the same values every time a LSP file was
decoded without first resetting them to their original values.
Change the code to check if the values are already doubled, and
then double/halve them as needed. This is still a bit ugly,
in the future consider using the built in rockbox dither instead
of a lookup table.
Fixes playback when skipping back and forth between low and high
bitrate WMA.
Change-Id: I4c393092e4a789bc8f98d74274fe207400b9550e
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/226
Reviewed-by: Michael Giacomelli <giac2000@hotmail.com>
Tested-by: Michael Giacomelli <giac2000@hotmail.com>
Creates a standard buffer passing, local data passing and messaging
system for processing stages. Stages can be moved to their own source
files to reduce clutter and ease assimilation of new ones. dsp.c
becomes dsp_core.c which supports an engine and framework for effects.
Formats and change notifications are passed along with the buffer so
that they arrive at the correct time at each stage in the chain
regardless of the internal delays of a particular one.
Removes restrictions on the number of samples that can be processed at
a time and it pays attention to destination buffer size restrictions
without having to limit input count, which also allows pcmbuf to
remain fuller and safely set its own buffer limits as it sees fit.
There is no longer a need to query input/output counts given a certain
number of input samples; just give it the sizes of the source and
destination buffers.
Works in harmony with stages that are not deterministic in terms of
sample input/output ratio (like both resamplers but most notably
the timestretch). As a result it fixes quirks with timestretch hanging
up with certain settings and it now operates properly throughout its
full settings range.
Change-Id: Ib206ec78f6f6c79259c5af9009fe021d68be9734
Reviewed-on: http://gerrit.rockbox.org/200
Reviewed-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>
Tested-by: Michael Sevakis <jethead71@rockbox.org>