This separates the test suite from the random gtk+ using test
programs. "demos" is somewhat misleading because the programs there
are not particularly exciting (with the possible exception of
composite-test which shows off all the compositing operators).
The next few commits will speed this up quite a bit.
Current output:
---
reference memcpy speed = 2217.5MB/s (554.4MP/s for 32bpp fills)
---
over_x888_8_0565 = L1: 54.67 L2: 54.01 M: 52.33 ( 18.88%) HT: 37.19 VT: 35.54 R: 29.40 RT: 13.63 ( 162Kops/s)
Green Hills Software MULTI compiler was producing a number
of warnings due to incorrect uses of int instead of the correct
corresponding pixman_*_t type.
radial-test is a port of the radial-gradient test from the cairo test
suite. It has been modified so that some pixels have 0 in both the a
and b coefficients of the quadratic equation solved by the rasterizer,
to expose a division by zero in the original implementation.
This option can be used for building fully static binaries of the test
programs so that they can be easily run using qemu-user. With binfmt-misc
configured, 'make check' works fine for crosscompiled pixman builds.
All objects using test/util.c fail to link:
| CCLD region-test
| /usr/bin/ld: utils.o: in function enable_fp_exceptions:utils.c(.text+0x939): error: undefined reference to 'feenableexcept'
There's indeed no explicit dependency on -lm, and if HAVE_FEENABLEEXCEPT
happens to be set, test/util.c uses feenableexcept(), which is nowhere
to be found while linking.
Fix this by adding -lm to TEST_LDADD, although two alternatives could be
thought of:
- Only specifying -lm for objects using util.c.
- Introducing a conditional to add -lm only when configure detects
have_feenableexcept=yes.
Signed-off-by: Cyril Brulebois <kibi@debian.org>
Remove a stray #include <fenv.h> added in commit 2444b2265a
to fix compilation on platforms which don't have fenv.h
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
This test program tries to use as many rarely-used features as
possible, including alpha maps, accessor functions, oddly-sized
images, strange transformations, conical gradients, etc.
The hope is to provoke crashes or irregular behavior in pixman.
There used to be a bug in the X server where it would rely on
out-of-bounds accesses when it was asked to composite with a
window as the source. It would create a pixman image pointing
to some bogus position in memory, but then set a clip region
to the position where the actual bits were.
Due to a bug in old versions of pixman, where it would not clip
against the image bounds when a clip region was set, this would
actually work. So when the pixman bug was fixed, a workaround was
added to allow certain out-of-bound accesses.
However, the 1.6 X server is so old now that we can remove this
workaround. This does mean that if you update pixman to 0.22 or later,
you will need to use a 1.7 X server or later.
Even after commit e46be417ce alphamap
test is still leaking the alphamap pixmap, leading to mmap() failures
on cygwin
Signed-off-by: Jon TURNEY <jon.turney@dronecode.org.uk>
The images are being created with non-NULL data, so we have to free it
outselves. This is important because the Cygwin tinderbox is running
out of memory and produces this:
mmap failed on 20000 1507328
mmap failed on 40000 1507328
mmap failed on 20000 1507328
mmap failed on 40000 1507328
mmap failed on 40000 1507328
mmap failed on 40000 1507328
http://tinderbox.x.org/builds/2010-10-05-0014/logs/pixman/#check
Each test uses the test number as the random number seed; if it
didn't, all the threads would run the same tests since they would all
start from the same seed.
Previously this test would try to exhaustively test all combinations
of formats and operators, which meant that it would take hours to run.
Instead, generate images randomly and test compositing those.
Cc: chris@chris-wilson.co.uk
Previously, this function would evaluate the error under the
assumption that the format was 565 or wider. This patch changes it to
take the actual format into account.
With that fixed, we can turn on testing for the rest of the formats.
Cc: chris@chris-wilson.co.uk
This function was using the number of bits in a channel as if it were
a mask, which lead to many spurious errors. With that fixed, we can
turn on testing for all formats where all channels have 5 or more
bits.
Cc: chris@chris-wilson.co.uk
The first broken optimization is that it checks "a != 0x00" where it
should check "s != 0x00". The other is that it skips the computation
when alpha is 0xff. That is wrong because in the formula:
min (1, (1 - Aa)/Ab)
the render specification states that if Ab is 0, the quotient is
defined to positive infinity. That is the case even if (1 - Aa) is 0.
This patch removes an unnecessary typecast of MAP_FAILED,
replaces an erroneous free() by the correct munmap() in the
error path for a failing mprotect(), and, finally, removes
redundant calls to mprotect() that aren't necessary, because
munmap() doesn't call for any specific memory protection.
Not all systems are regular Unices, so let's be careful with the
mmap()-related stuff, which might be unavailable. This patch makes
sure that mmap() and friends is used only when the <sys/mman.h>
header is found.
This test is a modified version of Siarhei's compositor throughput
benchmark. It's expanded with explicit reporting of memory bandwidth
consumption for the M-test, and with an additional 8x8-random test
intended to determine peak ops/sec capability. There are also quite a
lot more operations tested for.
Impending benchmark code will need a function to get current time
in seconds, and this patch introduces such routine. We try to use
the POSIX gettimeofday() function when available, and fall back to
clock() when not.
The aligned_malloc() routine will be used in more than one test utility.
At least, a low-level blitter benchmark needs it. Therefore, let's make
this function a part of common test utilities code.
There are versions for all combinations of x8r8g8b8/a8r8g8b8 and
pad/repeat/none/normal repeat modes. The bulk of each scaler is an
inline function that takes a format and a repeat mode as parameters.
The new scalers are all commented out, but the next commits will
enable them one at a time to facilitate bisecting.
This test tests compositing with various affine transformations. It is
almost identical to scaling-test, except that it also applies a random
rotation in addition to the random scaling and translation.
- Test many more combinations of formats
- Test destination alpha maps
- Test various different alpha origins
Also add a transformation to the destination, but comment it out
because it is actually broken at the moment (and pretty difficult to
fix).
These variants of malloc() and free() try to surround the allocated
memory with protected pages so that out-of-bounds accessess will cause
a segmentation fault.
If mprotect() and getpagesize() are not available, these functions are
simply equivalent to malloc() and free().
Added a pair of macros which can help to detect corruption
of floating point registers after a function call. This may
happen if _mm_empty() call is forgotten in MMX/SSE2 fast
path code, or ARM NEON assembly optimized function
forgets to save/restore d8-d15 registers before use.
This tests what happens if you attempt to make an image with an alpha
map that has the image as its alpha map. This results in an infinite
loop in _pixman_image_validate(), so the test sets up a SIGALRM to
exit if it runs for more than five seconds.
This extends scaling-crash-test to test some more things:
- All combinations of NEAREST/BILINEAR/CONVOLUTION filters and
NORMAL/PAD/REFLECT repeat modes.
- Tests various scale factors very close to 1/7th such that the source
area is very close to edge of the source image.
- The same things, only with scale factors very close to 1/32767th.
- Enables the commented-out tests for accessing memory outside the
source buffer.
Also there is now a border around the source buffer which has a
different color than the source buffer itself so that if we sample
outside, it will show up.
Finally, the test now allows the destination buffer to not be changed
at all. This allows pixman to simply bail out in cases where the
transformation too strange.
Negative scale factors are now also tested. A small additional
translate transform helps to stress the use of fractional
coordinates better.
Also the number of iterations to run by default increased in order
to compensate increased variety of operations to be tested.