Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view DOCS/tech/dr-methods.txt @ 34181:93c0ff76db5e
Use CONF_TYPE_FUNC_PARAM for option gui-include.
MPlayer must have called cfg_read() where gui.conf is read and
m_config_t *gui_conf is set, before cfg_gui_include() may be called.
This fixes a segmentation fault and partly reverts r34257.
author | ib |
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date | Wed, 26 Oct 2011 19:39:14 +0000 |
parents | 0f1b5b68af32 |
children |
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DIRECT RENDERING METHODS -- by A'rpi ======================== (based on a mail to -dev-eng) Ok. It seems none of you really knows what direct rendering means... I'll try to explain now! :) At first, there are 2 different way, both called direct rendering. The main point is the same, but they work different. method 1: decoding directly to externally provided buffers. so, the codec decodes macroblocks directly to the buffer provided by the caller. as this buffer will be read later (for MC of next frame) it's not a good idea to place such buffers in slow video ram. but. there are many video out drivers using buffers in system ram, and using some way of memcpy or DMA to blit it to video ram at display time. for example, Xv and X11 (normal and Shm too) are such thingie. XImage will be a buffer in system ram (!) and X*PutImage will copy it to video ram. Only nvidia and ati rage128 Xv drivers use DMA, others just memcpy it. Also some opengl drivers (including Matrox) uses DMA to copy from texsubimage to video ram. The current mplayer way mean: codec allocates some buffer, and decode image to that buffer. then this buffer is copied to X11's buffer. then Xserver copies this buffer to video ram. So one more memcpy than required... direct rendering can remove this extra memcpy, and use Xserver's memory buffers for decoding buffer. Note again: it helps only if the external buffer is in fast system ram. method 2: decoding to internal buffers, but blit after each macroblocks, including optional colorspace conversion. advantages: it can blit into video ram, as it keeps the copy in its internal buffers for next frame's MC. skipped macroblocks won't be copied again to video ram (except if video buffer address changes between frames -> hw double/triple buffering) Just avoiding blitting of skipped MBs mean about 100% speedup (2 times faster) for low bitrate (<700kbit) divxes. It even makes possible to watch VCD resolution divx on p200mmx with DGA. how does it work? the codec works as normally, decodes macroblocks into its internal buffer. but after each decoded macroblock, it immediatelly copies this macroblock to the video ram. it's in the L1 cache, so it will be fast. skipped macroblocks can be skipped easily -> less vram write -> more speedup. but, as it copies directly to video ram, it must do colorspace conversion if needed (for example divx -> rgb DGA), and cannot be used with scaling. another interesting question of such direct rendering is the planar formats. Eugene K. of Divx4 told me that he experienced worse performance blittig yv12 blocks (copied 3 blocks to 3 different (Y,U,V) buffers) than doing (really unneeded) yv12->yuy2 conversion on-the-fly. so, divx4 codec (with -vc divx4 api) converts from its internal yv12 buffer to the external yuy2. method 2a: libmpeg2 already uses simplified variation of this: when it finish decoding a slice (a horizontal line of MBs) it copies it to external (video ram) buffer (using callback to libvo), so at least it copies from L2 cache instead of slow ram. for non-predictive (B) frames it can re-use this cached memory for the next slice - so it uses less memory and has better cache utilization: it gave me 23% -> 20% VOB decoding speedup on p3. libavcodec supports per-slice callbacks too, but no slice-memory reusing for B frames yet. method 2b: some codecs (indeo vfw 3/4 using IF09, and libavcodec) can export the 'bitmap' of skipped macroblocks - so libvo driver can do selective blitting: copy only the changed macroblocks to slow vram. so, again: the main difference between method 1 and 2: method1 stores decoded data only once: in the external read/write buffer. method2 stores decoded data twice: in its internal read/write buffer (for later reading) and in the write-only slow video ram. both methods can make big speedup, depending on codec behaviour and libvo driver. for example, IPB mpegs could combine these, use method 2 for I/P frames and method 1 for B frams. mpeg2dec does already this. for I-only type video (like mjpeg) method 1 is better. for I/P type video with MC (like divx, h263 etc) method 2 is the best choice. for I/P type videos without MC (like FLI, CVID) could use method 1 with static buffer or method 2 with double/triple buffering. i hope it is clear now. and i hope even nick understand what are we talking about... ah, and at the end, the abilities of codecs: libmpeg2,libavcodec: can do method 1 and 2 (but slice level copy, not MB level) vfw, dshow: can do method 2, with static or variable address external buffer odivx, and most native codecs like fli, cvid, rle: can do method 1 divx4: can do method 2 (with old odivx api it does method 1) xanim: they currently can't do DR, but they exports their internal buffers. but it's very easy to implement menthod 1 support, and a bit harder but possible without any rewrite to do method 2. so, dshow and divx4 already implements all requirements of method 2. libmpeg2 and libavcodec implements method 1 and 2a (lavc 2b too) anyway, in the ideal world, we need all codecs support both methods. anyway 2: in ideal world, there are no libvo drivers having buffer in system ram and memcpy to video ram... anyway 3: in our really ideal world, all libvo driver has its buffers in fast sytem ram and does blitting with DMA... :) ============================================================================ MPlayer NOW! -- The libmpcodecs way. libmpcodecs replaced old draw callbacks with mpi (mplayer image) struct. steps of decoding with libmpcodecs: 1. codec requests an mpi from libmpcodecs core (vd.c) 2. vd creates an mpi struct filled by codec's requirements (size, stride, colorspace, flags, type) 3. vd asks libvo (control(VOCTRL_GET_IMAGE)), if it can provide such buffer: - if it can -> do direct rendering - it it can not -> allocate system ram area with memalign()/malloc() Note: codec may request EXPORT buffer, it means buffer allocation is done inside the codec, so we cannot do DR :( 4. codec decodes one frame to the mpi struct (system ram or direct rendering) 5. if it isn't DR, we call libvo's draw functions to blit image to video ram current possible buffer setups: - EXPORT - codec handles buffer allocation and it exports its buffer pointers used for opendivx, xanim and libavcodec - STATIC - codec requires a single static buffer with constant preserved content used by codecs which do partial updating of image, but doesn't require reading of previous frame. most rle-based codecs, like cvid, rle8, qtrle, qtsmc etc. - TEMP - codec requires a buffer, but it doesn't depend on previous frame at all used for I-only codecs (like mjpeg) and for codecs supporting method-2 direct rendering with variable buffer address (vfw, dshow, divx4). - IP - codec requires 2 (or more) read/write buffers. it's for codecs supporting method-1 direct rendering but using motion compensation (ie. reading from previous frame buffer). could be used for libavcodec (divx3/4,h263). IP buffer stays from 2 (or more) STATIC buffers. - IPB - similar to IP, but also have one (or more) TEMP buffers for B frames. it will be used for libmpeg2 and libavcodec (mpeg1/2/4). IPB buffer stays from 2 (or more) STATIC buffers and 1 (or more) TEMP buffer.