[FFmpeg-devel] shared api for exposing a texture

Don Moir donmoir at comcast.net
Fri May 15 22:42:59 CEST 2015


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Vittorio Giovara" <vittorio.giovara at gmail.com>
To: "libav development" <libav-devel at libav.org>; "FFmpeg development discussions and patches" <ffmpeg-devel at ffmpeg.org>
Sent: Friday, May 15, 2015 10:09 AM
Subject: [FFmpeg-devel] shared api for exposing a texture

> Hi,
> following the positive trend as of late, here is a shared discussion
> on a proposed API.
>
>
> There are a couple of formats that are based on texture compression,
> usually called DXTn or BCn, and described here:
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S3_Texture_Compression. Currently in
> libavcodec only txd uses this style, but there are others I am working
> on, namely Hap and DSS.
>
> What I thought while working on them (and later found out actually
> being of commercial interest) is that the texture could be potentially
> left intact and rather than being decoded (or encoded) internally by
> libavcodec. The user might want to skip decoding the texture
> altogether and decode it him or herself, possibly exploiting gpu
> acceleration.
>
> Unfortunately these formats often employ additional compression or add
> custom headers so the user can't just demux and accelerate the output
> frame as is. Interested codecs could let the user choose this with a
> private option.
>
>
> There are a couple of strategies here.
> 1. Introduce a pixel format for each texture: this has the advantage
> of getting appropriately-sized buffers, but in the end it would
> require having a different pixel format for each variant of each
> texture compression. Our users tend to dislike this option and I am
> afraid this would require us of constantly adding new texture formats
> when support is added.

I tend to favor a pixel format for each type. Much like RGB and YUV variations. It is straight forward and allows an easy decision 
if it is an alpha format or not. When support is added for new formats, you are always adding something and adding a pixel format 
seems the easist path. Introducing a single opaque pixel format means more work to convert to this format when it may not be needed, 
correct? Will you expand on this and state why your users dislike this?

> 2. Introduce a single opaque pixel format: this has the advantage of
> not having to update API at every new format, but leaves users in the
> dark to what the texture actually is, and requires to know what he or
> she is actually doing.
> 3. Introduce a single opaque pixel format and a side data: as a
> variant of above, the side data would contain which variant of of the
> texture and would let the user know how to deal with data without
> anything special.
> 4. Write in the normal data buffers: instead of filling in rgba
> buffers with decoded data, the raw texture could be written in
> data[0], and the side data would help understand how to interpret it.
> This could be somewhat hacky since it's not something users would
> normally expect.
> 5. Introduce refcounted side data: just write everything in a side
> data buffer and let the user act upon it on demand. Similar to idea 3,
> but without introducing new pixel formats. Could be potentially
> 6. Write in the 'special' data buffer : similar to what is done for
> paletted formats, write the texture in data[1], so that normal users
> don't have to worry about anything and special users might just access
> the appropriate buffers.
>
>
> Every idea has some drawbacks and some benefits, we should try to
> trade off between new APIs, maintenance and actual use cases. In my
> opinion 5 is interesting but probably overkill for this usecase. I
> like 3 for it simplicity and ease of use.
> What would other lavc devs think is the more appropriate one? What
> about our API users?
>
> Cheers,
> -- 
> Vittorio



More information about the ffmpeg-devel mailing list