ardour/libs/ardour/interpolation.cc
David Robillard 1324c25282 WIP: Fix namespace issues and build with GCC8
The build was broken for me with both GCC 8 and clang 11 due to the lookup of
operator<<().  However, since the previous pattern of using a namespace then
defining things in that namespace in... the global namespace... sort of... is
very strange, and likely to cause further problems with ADL especially as we
move to newer language versions and libraries, I opted to go all-out here and
define things inside the appropriate namespace.

This will probably resolve some earlier issues with clang and MSVC as well,
since they each use different lookup rules that all have their own quirks
around this stuff.
2021-05-25 16:41:19 -04:00

233 lines
6.3 KiB
C++

/*
* Copyright (C) 2009-2011 David Robillard <d@drobilla.net>
* Copyright (C) 2009-2012 Carl Hetherington <carl@carlh.net>
* Copyright (C) 2009-2017 Paul Davis <paul@linuxaudiosystems.com>
* Copyright (C) 2009 Hans Baier <hansfbaier@googlemail.com>
* Copyright (C) 2013-2017 Robin Gareus <robin@gareus.org>
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along
* with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
* 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
*/
#include <limits>
#include <cstdio>
#include <stdint.h>
#include "ardour/interpolation.h"
#include "ardour/midi_buffer.h"
using std::cerr;
using std::endl;
namespace ARDOUR {
CubicInterpolation::CubicInterpolation ()
: valid_z_bits (0)
{
}
samplecnt_t
CubicInterpolation::interpolate (int channel, samplecnt_t input_samples, Sample *input, samplecnt_t & output_samples, Sample *output)
{
assert (input_samples > 0);
assert (output_samples > 0);
assert (input);
assert (output);
assert (phase.size () > std::vector<double>::size_type (channel));
_speed = fabs (_speed);
if (invalid (0)) {
/* z[0] not set. Two possibilities
*
* 1) we have just been constructed or ::reset()
*
* 2) we were only given 1 sample after construction or
* ::reset, and stored it in z[1]
*/
if (invalid (1)) {
/* first call after construction or after ::reset */
switch (input_samples) {
case 1:
/* store one sample for use next time. We don't
* have enough points to interpolate or even
* compute the first z[0] value, but keep z[1]
* around.
*/
z[1] = input[0]; validate (1);
output_samples = 0;
return 0;
case 2:
/* store two samples for use next time, and
* compute a value for z[0] that will maintain
* the slope of the first actual segment. We
* still don't have enough samples to interpolate.
*/
z[0] = input[0] - (input[1] - input[0]); validate (0);
z[1] = input[0]; validate (1);
z[2] = input[1]; validate (2);
output_samples = 0;
return 0;
default:
/* We have enough samples to interpolate this time,
* but don't have a valid z[0] value because this is the
* first call after construction or ::reset.
*
* First point is based on a requirement to maintain
* the slope of the first actual segment
*/
z[0] = input[0] - (input[1] - input[0]); validate (0);
break;
}
} else {
/* at least one call since construction or
* after::reset, since we have z[1] set
*
* we can now compute z[0] as required
*/
z[0] = z[1] - (input[0] - z[1]); validate (0);
/* we'll check the number of samples we've been given
in the next switch() statement below, and either
just save some more samples or actual interpolate
*/
}
assert (is_valid (0));
}
switch (input_samples) {
case 1:
/* one more sample of input. find the right vX to store
it in, and decide if we're ready to interpolate
*/
if (invalid (1)) {
z[1] = input[0]; validate (1);
/* still not ready to interpolate */
output_samples = 0;
return 0;
} else if (invalid (2)) {
/* still not ready to interpolate */
z[2] = input[0]; validate (2);
output_samples = 0;
return 0;
} else if (invalid (3)) {
z[3] = input[0]; validate (3);
/* ready to interpolate */
}
break;
case 2:
/* two more samples of input. find the right vX to store
them in, and decide if we're ready to interpolate
*/
if (invalid (1)) {
z[1] = input[0]; validate (1);
z[2] = input[1]; validate (2);
/* still not ready to interpolate */
output_samples = 0;
return 0;
} else if (invalid (2)) {
z[2] = input[0]; validate (2);
z[3] = input[1]; validate (3);
/* ready to interpolate */
} else if (invalid (3)) {
z[3] = input[0]; validate (3);
/* ready to interpolate */
}
break;
default:
/* caller has given us at least enough samples to interpolate a
single value.
*/
z[1] = input[0]; validate (1);
z[2] = input[1]; validate (2);
z[3] = input[2]; validate (3);
}
/* ready to interpolate using z[0], z[1], z[2] and z[3] */
assert (is_valid (0));
assert (is_valid (1));
assert (is_valid (2));
assert (is_valid (3));
/* we can use up to (input_samples - 2) of the input, so compute the
* maximum number of output samples that represents.
*
* Remember that the expected common case here is to be given
* input_samples that is substantially larger than output_samples,
* thus allowing us to always compute output_samples in one call.
*/
const samplecnt_t output_from_input = floor ((input_samples - 2) / _speed);
/* limit output to either the caller's requested number or the number
* determined by the input size.
*/
const samplecnt_t limit = std::min (output_samples, output_from_input);
samplecnt_t outsample = 0;
double distance = phase[channel];
samplecnt_t used = floor (distance);
samplecnt_t i = 0;
while (outsample < limit) {
i = floor (distance);
/* this call may stop the loop from being vectorized */
float fractional_phase_part = fmod (distance, 1.0);
/* Cubically interpolate into the output buffer */
output[outsample++] = z[1] + 0.5f * fractional_phase_part *
(z[2] - z[0] + fractional_phase_part * (4.0f * z[2] + 2.0f * z[0] - 5.0f * z[1] - z[3] +
fractional_phase_part * (3.0f * (z[1] - z[2]) - z[0] + z[3])));
distance += _speed;
z[0] = z[1];
z[1] = input[i];
z[2] = input[i+1];
z[3] = input[i+2];
}
output_samples = outsample;
phase[channel] = fmod (distance, 1.0);
return i - used;
}
void
CubicInterpolation::reset ()
{
Interpolation::reset ();
valid_z_bits = 0;
}
samplecnt_t
CubicInterpolation::distance (samplecnt_t nsamples)
{
assert (phase.size () > 0);
return floor (floor (phase[0]) + (_speed * nsamples));
}
} // namespace ARDOUR