We define _GNU_SOURCE globally in both the Autotools build, through the
use of the AC_USE_SYSTEM_EXTENSIONS macro; and in the Meson build, with
add_project_arguments().
It was originally added to make bisecting easier,
but has outlived its usefuleness now.
Going forward we'll have just a single cairo-version.h
header file, the one with the real version numbers.
This is needed to fix the case where cairo is being
built as a Meson subproject, but also simplifies
things in general.
Fixes#421
Although in this case the boolean values are guaranteed to be 1/0,
using them as true/false (in an if condition) seems much saner than
using them to limit the number of iterations on a for loop.
Fixes:
cairo-perf-micro.c:221:5: warning: cannot optimize possibly infinite
loops [-Wunsafe-loop-optimizations]
Keep the option flags in alphabetical order. This makes it easier to
check for collisions or missing handlers.
Avoids an internal error when passing flags -c, -r or -v to
cairo-analyse-trace.
Having spent the last dev cycle looking at how we could specialize the
compositors for various backends, we once again look for the
commonalities in order to reduce the duplication. In part this is
motivated by the idea that spans is a good interface for both the
existent GL backend and pixman, and so they deserve a dedicated
compositor. xcb/xlib target an identical rendering system and so they
should be using the same compositor, and it should be possible to run
that same compositor locally against pixman to generate reference tests.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
P.S. This brings massive upheaval (read breakage) I've tried delaying in
order to fix as many things as possible but now this one patch does far,
far, far too much. Apologies in advance for breaking your favourite
backend, but trust me in that the end result will be much better. :)
A variant of many-strokes tries to answer the question of how much
overhead is there in stroking, i.e. if we fill an equivalent path to a
set of strokes, do we see an equivalence in performance?
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
An intersection variant to exercise the stroker with many, many lines. A
silly benchmark, but a popular one in the wild.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
A benchmark to test the speed of hash tables when inserting and
removing a huge number of elements.
Although originally hash tables were assumed not to get many
deletions, in practice they are now being used as caches in multiple
places. This means that they often have a fixed number of live
elements and an element is evicted whenever a new element is inserted
(this happens explicitly for cairo_cache_t objects, but also, for
example, in scaled_font_map + holdovers). This access pattern is very
inefficient with the current implementation.
Reset the cairo_t to the initial state so that subsequent tests are not
affected by earlier tests.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
A benchmark to test how close we get to reducing paint+clip to an ordinary
fill, and to check correctness.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Benjamin just demonstrated this funky trick for generating pixel
outlines, and as no good deed should go unpunished, I've added his code
to the perf suite.
Signed-off-by: Chris Wilson <chris@chris-wilson.co.uk>
Make the loops count depend on the actual calibration_loops/calibration_time
instead of calibration_loops/calibration_max_time.
This avoids having some tests take much less/more than the wanted time per iteration
(I was having some tests taking about 1 second, other taking about 7 seconds when
the ms_per_iteration was 2000)
Spend 0.5-1 times the time wanted for each iteration in calibration, increase the
accuracy of loops count. Just making the loops count be the correct ratio doesn't
guarantee that the iteration time is accurate. By actually measuring iteration
times until it gets greater than 1/4 of the wanted time, the total sum is bound
to be <= the wanted iteration time and last calibration time is between 1/4 and
1/2 of the wanted time, so it should give a very accurate loop count.
Provide a hook for the test to be able to compute the number of ops per
second. For instance, the glyphs test uses it to report the number of
kiloglyph per second Cairo is able to render.