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>
This tool uses lavfi internal symbols not accessible in shared
libraries. TESTPROGS are linked statically to allow them use of
library internals not normally exported.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>