Coverage Report

Created: 2018-09-25 14:53

/src/mozilla-central/third_party/aom/aom_dsp/entcode.c
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/*
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 * Copyright (c) 2001-2016, Alliance for Open Media. All rights reserved
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 *
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 * This source code is subject to the terms of the BSD 2 Clause License and
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 * the Alliance for Open Media Patent License 1.0. If the BSD 2 Clause License
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 * was not distributed with this source code in the LICENSE file, you can
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 * obtain it at www.aomedia.org/license/software. If the Alliance for Open
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 * Media Patent License 1.0 was not distributed with this source code in the
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 * PATENTS file, you can obtain it at www.aomedia.org/license/patent.
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 */
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#include "aom_dsp/entcode.h"
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/*Given the current total integer number of bits used and the current value of
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   rng, computes the fraction number of bits used to OD_BITRES precision.
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  This is used by od_ec_enc_tell_frac() and od_ec_dec_tell_frac().
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  nbits_total: The number of whole bits currently used, i.e., the value
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                returned by od_ec_enc_tell() or od_ec_dec_tell().
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  rng: The current value of rng from either the encoder or decoder state.
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  Return: The number of bits scaled by 2**OD_BITRES.
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          This will always be slightly larger than the exact value (e.g., all
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           rounding error is in the positive direction).*/
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uint32_t od_ec_tell_frac(uint32_t nbits_total, uint32_t rng) {
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  uint32_t nbits;
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  int l;
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  int i;
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  /*To handle the non-integral number of bits still left in the encoder/decoder
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     state, we compute the worst-case number of bits of val that must be
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     encoded to ensure that the value is inside the range for any possible
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     subsequent bits.
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    The computation here is independent of val itself (the decoder does not
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     even track that value), even though the real number of bits used after
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     od_ec_enc_done() may be 1 smaller if rng is a power of two and the
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     corresponding trailing bits of val are all zeros.
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    If we did try to track that special case, then coding a value with a
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     probability of 1/(1 << n) might sometimes appear to use more than n bits.
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    This may help explain the surprising result that a newly initialized
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     encoder or decoder claims to have used 1 bit.*/
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  nbits = nbits_total << OD_BITRES;
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  l = 0;
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  for (i = OD_BITRES; i-- > 0;) {
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    int b;
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    rng = rng * rng >> 15;
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    b = (int)(rng >> 16);
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    l = l << 1 | b;
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    rng >>= b;
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  }
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  return nbits - l;
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}