Some sink flags are really just a product of what callbacks
are set on the device. We still enforce a degree of sanity
that the flags match the callbacks set, but we also set the
flags automatically in our callback setter functions to
help ensure that a) people use them and b) flags & callbacks
are kept in sync.
This is not currently useful but future commits will make further
changes concerning automatic setting of flags and event delivery
that makes this structure necessary.
This piggy backs onto the previous changes for protocol 22 and
thus does not bump the version. This and the previous commits should be
seen as mostly atomic. Apologies for any bisecting issues this causes
(although I would expect these to be minimal)
When using transport configured via Media API sample spec needs to be
updated since codec configuration may affect it when e.g. headset
configure a different frequency or number of channels from default.
When volume changes in bluetooth device PulseAudio volume is rounded
one too low, so if bluetooth headset changes volume and that volume
is immediately set again for bluetooth device, bluetooth step drifts
lower all the time. Volume is incremented by one in the conversion so
that we get right bluetooth step when re-applying volume.
Signed-off-by: Juho Hämäläinen <ext-juho.hamalainen@nokia.com>
Previously the userdata for the volume callbacks was saved to
pa_core.shared only once when loading module-bluetooth-device, and only when
the SCO over PCM feature was used. That breaks volume handling in cases where
the HSP profile is used without the SCO over PCM setup. Now the userdata is
set always when a sink or source is created, and removed when a sink or source
is removed.
The current implementation is totally bogus, it cast the over_sink
userdata to the bluetooth-device userdata... It was failing nicely
because the previous code had a gentle safe-guard in u->profile ==
PROFILE_HSP, and u->profile was just random.
There is no easy way to associate additional data to a sink or
source. Two solutions seems possible: looking up loaded modules and
check which one was handling the sink/source, or using pa_shared. I
went for the second solution.
This pulls a2dp-codecs.h from BlueZ which contains the capabilities
structures for SBC and MPEG. We currently have these manually added to
ipc.h, so pulling this header makes our files identical to upstream.
This update pulls in commit c495077c [1] to fix a build error.
commit c495077cf8a8c37afd90875ec5a5b16b294be15e
Author: Siarhei Siamashka <siarhei.siamashka@nokia.com>
Date: Tue Mar 29 01:57:39 2011 +0300
sbc: better compatibility with ARM thumb/thumb2
ARM assembly optimizations fail to compile in thumb mode, but are fine
for thumb2. Update ifdefs in the code to make use of ARM assembly only
when it is safe and also make sure that no optimizations are missed
when compiling for thumb2.
The problem was reported by Paul Menzel:
https://tango.0pointer.de/pipermail/pulseaudio-discuss/2011-February/009022.html
This patch is tested with OpenEmbedded using `minimal-uclibc` for `MACHINE = "at91sam9260ek"`.
Note that changes to ipc.h from 8f3ef04b had to be manually reapplied.
[1] http://git.kernel.org/?p=bluetooth/bluez.git;a=commit;h=c495077cf8a8c37afd90875ec5a5b16b294be15e
It's perfectly normal for BlueZ to disable some endpoint types, so printing a
log message at error level isn't a good idea.
For facilitating an informative message in case some endpoint type is disabled,
the send_and_add_to_pending() function interface is also changed to be more
generic (the pa_bluetooth_device pointer is replaced with a void pointer).
Mostly warnings about unused stuff.
Furthermore, the first hunk is a fix for the change in 177948a6.
Finally, comment in AEC_dtd was translated and the code simplified slightly.
CC module_bluetooth_device_la-module-bluetooth-device.lo
modules/bluetooth/module-bluetooth-device.c: In function ‘a2dp_process_render’:
modules/bluetooth/module-bluetooth-device.c:1335:30: warning: pointer targets in passing argument 6 of ‘sbc_encode’
differ in signedness [-Wpointer-sign]
../src/modules/bluetooth/sbc/sbc.h:92:9: note: expected ‘ssize_t *’ but argument is of type ‘size_t *’
CC module_rygel_media_server_la-module-rygel-media-server.lo
modules/module-rygel-media-server.c:383:13: warning: ‘append_property_dict_entry_object_array’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
CC module_echo_cancel_la-adrian-aec.lo
modules/echo-cancel/adrian-aec.h:360:15: warning: ‘AEC_getambient’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
modules/echo-cancel/adrian-aec.h:368:14: warning: ‘AEC_setgain’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
modules/echo-cancel/adrian-aec.h:374:14: warning: ‘AEC_setaes’ defined but not used [-Wunused-function]
modules/echo-cancel/adrian-aec.h:377:16: warning: ‘AEC_max_dotp_xf_xf’ declared ‘static’ but never defined [-Wunused-function]
CC module_echo_cancel_la-module-echo-cancel.lo
modules/echo-cancel/module-echo-cancel.c: In function ‘time_callback’:
modules/echo-cancel/module-echo-cancel.c:266:12: warning: variable ‘fs’ set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]
CC module-virtual-sink.lo
modules/module-virtual-sink.c: In function ‘sink_input_pop_cb’:
modules/module-virtual-sink.c:206:15: warning: variable ‘current_latency’ set but not used [-Wunused-but-set-variable]
The optimized filter gets enabled when the code is compiled
with -mcpu=/-march options set to target the processors which
support ARMv6 instructions. This code is also disabled when
NEON is used (which is a lot better alternative). For additional
safety ARM EABI is required and thumb mode should not be used.
Benchmarks from ARM11:
== 8 subbands ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m 35.65s
user 0m 34.17s
sys 0m 1.28s
$ time ./sbcenc.armv6 -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m 17.29s
user 0m 15.47s
sys 0m 0.67s
== 4 subbands ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s4 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m 25.28s
user 0m 23.76s
sys 0m 1.32s
$ time ./sbcenc.armv6 -b53 -s4 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m 18.64s
user 0m 15.78s
sys 0m 2.22s
In the case of scale factors calculation optimizations, the inline
assembly code has instructions which update flags register, but
"cc" was not mentioned in the clobber list. When optimizing code,
gcc theoretically is allowed to do a comparison before the inline
assembly block, and a conditional branch after it which would lead
to a problem if the flags register gets clobbered. While this is
apparently not happening in practice with the current versions of
gcc, the clobber list needs to be corrected.
Regarding the other inline assembly blocks. While most likely it
is actually unnecessary based on quick review, "cc" is also added
there to the clobber list because it should have no impact on
performance in practice. It's kind of cargo cult, but relieves
us from the need to track the potential updates of flags register
in all these places.
By using SBC_ALWAYS_INLINE trick, the implementation of 'sbc_calculate_bits'
function is split into two branches, each having 'subband' variable value
known at compile time. It helps the compiler to generate more optimal code
by saving at least one extra register, and also provides more obvious
opportunities for loops unrolling.
Benchmarked on ARM Cortex-A8:
== Before: ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m3.989s
user 0m3.602s
sys 0m0.391s
samples % image name symbol name
26057 32.6128 sbcenc sbc_pack_frame
20003 25.0357 sbcenc sbc_analyze_4b_8s_neon
14220 17.7977 sbcenc sbc_calculate_bits
8498 10.6361 no-vmlinux /no-vmlinux
5300 6.6335 sbcenc sbc_calc_scalefactors_j_neon
3235 4.0489 sbcenc sbc_enc_process_input_8s_be_neon
2172 2.7185 sbcenc sbc_encode
== After: ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m3.652s
user 0m3.195s
sys 0m0.445s
samples % image name symbol name
26207 36.0095 sbcenc sbc_pack_frame
19820 27.2335 sbcenc sbc_analyze_4b_8s_neon
8629 11.8566 no-vmlinux /no-vmlinux
6988 9.6018 sbcenc sbc_calculate_bits
5094 6.9994 sbcenc sbc_calc_scalefactors_j_neon
3351 4.6044 sbcenc sbc_enc_process_input_8s_be_neon
2182 2.9982 sbcenc sbc_encode
Previous variant was basically derived from C and MMX implementations.
Now new variant makes use of 'vmax' instruction, which is available in
NEON and can do this job faster. The same method for calculating scale
factors is also used in 'sbc_calc_scalefactors_j_neon'.
Benchmarked without joint stereo on ARM Cortex-A8:
== Before: ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s8 test.au > /dev/null
real 0m3.851s
user 0m3.375s
sys 0m0.469s
samples % image name symbol name
26260 34.2672 sbcenc sbc_pack_frame
20013 26.1154 sbcenc sbc_analyze_4b_8s_neon
13796 18.0027 sbcenc sbc_calculate_bits
8388 10.9457 no-vmlinux /no-vmlinux
3229 4.2136 sbcenc sbc_enc_process_input_8s_be_neon
2408 3.1422 sbcenc sbc_calc_scalefactors_neon
2093 2.7312 sbcenc sbc_encode
== After: ==
$ time ./sbcenc -b53 -s8 test.au > /dev/null
real 0m3.796s
user 0m3.344s
sys 0m0.438s
samples % image name symbol name
26582 34.8726 sbcenc sbc_pack_frame
20032 26.2797 sbcenc sbc_analyze_4b_8s_neon
13808 18.1146 sbcenc sbc_calculate_bits
8374 10.9858 no-vmlinux /no-vmlinux
3187 4.1810 sbcenc sbc_enc_process_input_8s_be_neon
2027 2.6592 sbcenc sbc_encode
1766 2.3168 sbcenc sbc_calc_scalefactors_neon
The code for scale factors calculation with joint stereo support has
been moved to a separate function. It can get platform-specific
SIMD optimizations later for best possible performance.
But even this change in C code improves performance because of the
use of __builtin_clz() instead of loops similar to what was done
to sbc_calc_scalefactors earlier. Also technically it does loop
unrolling by processing two channels at once, which might be either
good or bad for performance (if the registers pressure is increased
and more data is spilled to memory). But the benchmark from 32-bit
x86 system (pentium-m) shows that it got clearly faster:
$ time ./sbcenc.old -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m1.868s
user 0m1.808s
sys 0m0.048s
$ time ./sbcenc.new -b53 -s8 -j test.au > /dev/null
real 0m1.742s
user 0m1.668s
sys 0m0.064s
This prevents overflows and audible artefacts for the audio files which
originally had loudness maximized. Music from audio CD disks is an
example of such files, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudness_war
Buffer position in X array was not always 16-bytes aligned.
Strict 16-byte alignment is strictly required for powerpc altivec
simd optimizations because altivec does not have support for
unaligned vector loads at all.
NREC stands for Noise Reduction and Echo Cancelation, it can be changed
at any point by the headset.
When set to "1" indicates that those algorithms shall be enabled by
default and "0" means the headset probably have them active so they
should be disabled in PA side.
Use minimum bitpool configured to get the maximum block_size possible,
also remove checks for how much has been written when decoding sbc frames
since the block size may change due to bitpool changes.
When audio skips it could be that there is some bandwidth limitation in
the link e.g. headset doesn't support EDR (< 2.0), and by reducing
the bitpool it may find a better rate that either prevent the skips
completely or at least reduce them.
Acquire now return input and output MTU of the file descriptor so it is
no longer necessary to get those after acquiring the fd, which less round
trips and faster response time when switching profiles.
Instead <pulsecore/poll.h> should be included. That file includes poll.h on
platform where it is appropriate. Also remove some unnecessary <ioctl.h>
includes.
A2DP spec allow bitpool changes midstream which is why sbc configuration
has a range of values for bitpool that the encoder can use and decoder
must support.
Bitpool changes do not affect the state of encoder/decoder so they don't
need to be reinitialize when this happens, so the impact is fairly small,
what it does change is the frame length so encoders may change the
bitpool to use the link more efficiently.