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The official guide to swscale for confused developers.
Originally committed as revision 15316 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
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doc/swscale.txt
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The official guide to swscale for confused developers.
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========================================================
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Current (simplified) Architecture:
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---------------------------------
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Input
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v
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_______OR_________
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/ \
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/ \
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special converter [Input to YUV converter]
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| |
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| (8bit YUV 4:4:4 / 4:2:2 / 4:2:0 / 4:0:0 )
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| |
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| v
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| Horizontal scaler
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| |
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| (15bit YUV 4:4:4 / 4:2:2 / 4:2:0 / 4:1:1 / 4:0:0 )
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| v
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| Vertical scaler and output converter
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v v
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output
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Swscale has 2 scaler pathes, each side must be capable to handle
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slices, that is consecutive non overlapping rectangles of dimension
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(0,slice_top) - (picture_width, slice_bottom)
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special converter
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This generally are unscaled converters of common
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formats, like YUV 4:2:0/4:2:2 -> RGB15/16/24/32. Though it could also
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in principle contain scalers optimized for specific common cases.
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Main path
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The main path is used when no special converter can be used, the code
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is designed as a destination line pull architecture. That is for each
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output line the vertical scaler pulls lines from a ring buffer that
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when the line is unavailable pulls it from the horizontal scaler and
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input converter of the current slice.
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When no more output can be generated as lines from a next slice would
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be needed then all remaining lines in the current slice are converted
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and horizontally scaled and put in the ring buffer.
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[this is done for luma and chroma, each with possibly different numbers
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of lines per picture]
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Input to YUV Converter
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When the input to the main path is not planar 8bit per component yuv or
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8bit gray then it is converted to planar 8bit YUV, 2 sets of converters
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exist for this currently one performing horizontal downscaling by 2
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before the convertion and the other leaving the full chroma resolution
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but being slightly slower. The scaler will try to preserve full chroma
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here when the output uses it, its possible to force full chroma with
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SWS_FULL_CHR_H_INP though even for cases where the scaler thinks its
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useless.
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Horizontal scaler
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There are several horizontal scalers, a special case worth mentioning is
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the fast bilinear scaler that is made of runtime generated mmx2 code
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using specially tuned pshufw instructions.
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The remaining scalers are specially tuned for various filter lengths
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they scale 8bit unsigned planar data to 16bit signed planar data.
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Future >8bit per component inputs will need to add a new scaler here
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that preserves the input precission.
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Vertical scaler and output converter
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There is a large number of combined vertical scalers+output converters
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Some are:
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* unscaled output converters
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* unscaled output converters that average 2 chroma lines
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* bilinear converters (C, MMX and accurate MMX)
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* arbitrary filter length converters (C, MMX and accurate MMX)
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And
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* Plain C 8bit 4:2:2 YUV -> RGB converters using LUTs
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* Plain C 17bit 4:4:4 YUV -> RGB converters using multiplies
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* MMX 11bit 4:2:2 YUV -> RGB converters
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* Plain C 16bit Y -> 16bit gray
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...
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RGB with less than 8bit per component uses dither to improve the
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subjective quality and low frequency accuracy.
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Filter coefficients:
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--------------------
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There are several different scalers (bilinear, bicubic, lanczos, area, sinc, ...)
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Their coefficients are calculated in initFilter().
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Horinzontal filter coeffs have a 1.0 point at 1<<14, vertical ones at 1<<12.
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The 1.0 points have been choosen to maximize precission while leaving a
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little headroom for convolutional filters like sharpening filters and
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minimizing SIMD instructions needed to apply them.
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It would be trivial to use a different 1.0 point if some specific scaler
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would benefit from it.
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Also as already hinted at initFilter() accepts an optional convolutional
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filter as input that can be used for contrast, saturation, blur, sharpening
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shift, chroma vs. luma shift, ...
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