Callers of ff_framesync_get_frame() generally do not expect the result
to be writable, those that do (e.g. ff_framesync_dualinput_get_writable())
ensure writability themselves.
Significantly reduces memory consumption in complex graphs with
framesync-based filters (e.g. scale, ssim).
Reported-By: Mark Shwartzman
Found by reviewing CID1513722 Operands don't affect result
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Fixes: CID1604398 Unchecked return value
Fixes: CID1604542 Unchecked return value
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Fixes: CID1452758 Out-of-bounds read (actual out of bounds access depends on a frame with more than 3 planes)
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Fixes: CID1437470 Out-of-bounds read (out of bounds read would only occur with a pixel format of more than 4 planes)
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
An incorrect calculation in ff_perlin_init causes a write to the
stack array at index 256, which is out of bounds.
Fixes: CID1608711
Reviewed-by: Stefano Sabatini <stefasab@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
scale_frame() inconsistently handled the lifetime of `in`. Fixes a
possible double free and a possible memory leak.
The new code always has `scale_frame` take over ownership of the input
frame. I first tried writing this code in a way where the calling code
retains ownership, but this is nontrivial due to the presence of the
no-op short-circuit condition in which the input frame is directly
returned. (As an alternative, we could use av_frame_clone() instead, but
I wanted to avoid touching the original behavior in this commit)
Fixes: CID1551694 Use after free (false positive based on assuming that out == in and one is freed and one used)
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Fixes: CID1598548 Logically dead code
Sponsored-by: Sovereign Tech Fund
Reviewed-by: "Xiang, Haihao" <haihao.xiang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Due to hysterical raisins, most RISC-V Linux distributions target a
RV64GC baseline excluding the Bit-manipulation ISA extensions, most
notably:
- Zba: address generation extension and
- Zbb: basic bit manipulation extension.
Most CPUs that would make sense to run FFmpeg on support Zba and Zbb
(including the current FATE runner), so it makes sense to optimise for
them. In fact a large chunk of existing assembler optimisations relies
on Zba and/or Zbb.
Since we cannot patch shared library code, the next best thing is to
carry a flag initialised at load-time and check it on need basis.
This results in 3 instructions overhead on isolated use, e.g.:
1: AUIPC rd, %pcrel_hi(ff_rv_zbb_supported)
LBU rd, %pcrel_lo(1b)(rd)
BEQZ rd, non_Zbb_fallback_code
// Zbb code here
The C compiler will typically load the flag ahead of time to reducing
latency, and can also keep it around if Zbb is used multiple times in a
single optimisation scope. For this to work, the flag symbol must be
hidden; otherwise the optimisation degrades with a GOT look-up to
support interposition:
1: AUIPC rd, GOT_OFFSET_HI
LD rd, GOT_OFFSET_LO(rd)
LBU rd, (rd)
BEQZ rd, non_Zbb_fallback_code
// Zbb code here
This patch adds code to provision the flag in libraries using bit
manipulation functions from libavutil: byte-swap, bit-weight and
counting leading or trailing zeroes.
Add xpu device support to libtorch backend.
To enable xpu support you need to add
"-Wl,--no-as-needed -lintel-ext-pt-gpu -Wl,--as-needed" to
"--extra-libs" when configure ffmpeg.
Signed-off-by: Wenbin Chen <wenbin.chen@intel.com>