Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Lynne
8e94b7cff0
lavu/tx: invert permutation lookups
out[lut[i]] = in[i] lookups were 4.04 times(!) slower than
out[i] = in[lut[i]] lookups for an out-of-place FFT of length 4096.

The permutes remain unchanged for anything but out-of-place monolithic
FFT, as those benefit quite a lot from the current order (it means
there's only 1 lookup necessary to add to an offset, rather than
a full gather).

The code was based around non-power-of-two FFTs, so this wasn't
benchmarked early on.
2021-02-27 04:21:05 +01:00
Lynne
9ddaf0c9f0
lavu/tx: simplify in-place permute search function 2021-02-27 04:21:03 +01:00
Andreas Rheinhardt
c7c7aa85b7 avutil/tx: Fix declaration after statement
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
2021-02-22 10:03:32 +01:00
Lynne
5ca40d6d94
lavu/tx: support in-place FFT transforms
This commit adds support for in-place FFT transforms. Since our
internal transforms were all in-place anyway, this only changes
the permutation on the input.

Unfortunately, research papers were of no help here. All focused
on dry hardware implementations, where permutes are free, or on
software implementations where binary bloat is of no concern so
storing dozen times the transforms for each permutation and version
is not considered bad practice.
Still, for a pure C implementation, it's only around 28% slower
than the multi-megabyte FFTW3 in unaligned mode.

Unlike a closed permutation like with PFA, split-radix FFT bit-reversals
contain multiple NOPs, multiple simple swaps, and a few chained swaps,
so regular single-loop single-state permute loops were not possible.
Instead, we filter out parts of the input indices which are redundant.
This allows for a single branch, and with some clever AVX512 asm,
could possibly be SIMD'd without refactoring.

The inplace_idx array is guaranteed to never be larger than the
revtab array, and in practice only requires around log2(len) entries.

The power-of-two MDCTs can be done in-place as well. And it's
possible to eliminate a copy in the compound MDCTs too, however
it'll be slower than doing them out of place, and we'd need to dirty
the input array.
2021-02-21 17:05:16 +01:00
Lynne
e8f054b095 lavu/tx: implement 32 bit fixed point FFT and MDCT
Required minimal changes to the code so made sense to implement.
FFT and MDCT tested, the output of both was properly rounded.
Fun fact: the non-power-of-two fixed-point FFT and MDCT are the fastest ever
non-power-of-two fixed-point FFT and MDCT written.
This can replace the power of two integer MDCTs in aac and ac3 if the
MIPS optimizations are ported across.
Unfortunately the ac3 encoder uses a 16-bit fixed point forward transform,
unlike the encoder which uses a 32bit inverse transform, so some modifications
might be required there.

The 3-point FFT is somewhat less accurate than it otherwise could be,
having minor rounding errors with bigger transforms. However, this
could be improved later, and the way its currently written is the way one
would write assembly for it.
Similar rounding errors can also be found throughout the power of two FFTs
as well, though those are more difficult to correct.
Despite this, the integer transforms are more than accurate enough.
2020-02-13 17:10:34 +00:00
Lynne
42e2319ba9 lavu/tx: add support for double precision FFT and MDCT
Simply moves and templates the actual transforms to support an
additional data type.
Unlike the float version, which is equal or better than libfftw3f,
double precision output is bit identical with libfftw3.
2019-08-02 01:19:52 +01:00
Ruiling Song
65646db8e8 avutil/tx: should check against (*ctx)
ctx is a pointer to pointer here.

Signed-off-by: Ruiling Song <ruiling.song@intel.com>
2019-05-16 18:25:31 -03:00
Lynne
6044534964 avutil/tx: fix forward compound non-mod-15 based MDCTs
There was a hardcoded value left. Wasn't caught earlier as no code uses
compound forward mod-3/5 MDCTs yet.
2019-05-16 17:31:53 +01:00
Lynne
b79b29ddb1 libavutil: add an FFT & MDCT implementation
This commit adds a new API to libavutil to allow for arbitrary transformations
on various types of data.
This is a partly new implementation, with the power of two transforms taken
from libavcodec/fft_template, the 5 and 15-point FFT taken from mdct15, while
the 3-point FFT was written from scratch.
The (i)mdct folding code is taken from mdct15 as well, as the mdct_template
code was somewhat old, messy and not easy to separate.

A notable feature of this implementation is that it allows for 3xM and 5xM
based transforms, where M is a power of two, e.g. 384, 640, 768, 1280, etc.
AC-4 uses 3xM transforms while Siren uses 5xM transforms, so the code will
allow for decoding of such streams.
A non-exaustive list of supported sizes:
4, 8, 12, 16, 20, 24, 32, 40, 48, 60, 64, 80, 96, 120, 128, 160, 192, 240,
256, 320, 384, 480, 512, 640, 768, 960, 1024, 1280, 1536, 1920, 2048, 2560...

The API was designed such that it allows for not only 1D transforms but also
2D transforms of certain block sizes. This was partly on accident as the stride
argument is required for Opus MDCTs, but can be used in the context of a 2D
transform as well.
Also, various data types would be implemented eventually as well, such as
"double" and "int32_t".

Some performance comparisons with libfftw3f (SIMD disabled for both):
120:
  22353 decicycles in     fftwf_execute,     1024 runs,      0 skips
  21836 decicycles in compound_fft_15x8,     1024 runs,      0 skips

128:
  22003 decicycles in       fftwf_execute,   1024 runs,      0 skips
  23132 decicycles in monolithic_fft_ptwo,   1024 runs,      0 skips

384:
  75939 decicycles in      fftwf_execute,    1024 runs,      0 skips
  73973 decicycles in compound_fft_3x128,    1024 runs,      0 skips

640:
 104354 decicycles in       fftwf_execute,   1024 runs,      0 skips
 149518 decicycles in compound_fft_5x128,    1024 runs,      0 skips

768:
 109323 decicycles in      fftwf_execute,    1024 runs,      0 skips
 164096 decicycles in compound_fft_3x256,    1024 runs,      0 skips

960:
 186210 decicycles in      fftwf_execute,    1024 runs,      0 skips
 215256 decicycles in compound_fft_15x64,    1024 runs,      0 skips

1024:
 163464 decicycles in       fftwf_execute,   1024 runs,      0 skips
 199686 decicycles in monolithic_fft_ptwo,   1024 runs,      0 skips

With SIMD we should be faster than fftw for 15xM transforms as our fft15 SIMD
is around 2x faster than theirs, even if our ptwo SIMD is slightly slower.

The goal is to remove the libavcodec/mdct15 code and deprecate the
libavcodec/avfft interface once aarch64 and x86 SIMD code has been ported.
New code throughout the project should use this API.

The implementation passes fate when used in Opus, AAC and Vorbis, and the output
is identical with ATRAC9 as well.
2019-05-15 17:39:59 +01:00