Tested by running on skps/sp_desk_nytimes.skp.
The output .skp had no nested draw picture calls, and the files were both 9.3M.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1221303020
Some of this is transitive, like SkRecords.h used by SkMiniRecorder.h
used by (public) SkPictureRecorder.h.
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1217293004
I'm getting this error, which is fixed by this change:
[75/76] LINK skpdiff
FAILED: c++ -m64 -pie -Wl,-rpath=\$ORIGIN/lib/ -Wl,-rpath-link=lib/ -o skpdiff -Wl,--start-group obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.skpdiff_main.o obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.SkDiffContext.o obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.SkImageDiffer.o obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.SkPMetric.o obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.skpdiff_util.o obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.SkDifferentPixelsMetric_cpu.o obj/gyp/libflags.a obj/gyp/libpicture_utils.a -Wl,--end-group lib/libskia.so -lrt -lz
/usr/bin/ld: obj/tools/skpdiff/skpdiff.SkDiffContext.o: undefined reference to symbol 'pthread_mutexattr_settype@@GLIBC_2.2.5'
//lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libpthread.so.0: error adding symbols: DSO missing from command line
collect2: error: ld returned 1 exit status
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1206333002
This moves the SkFontMgr::Factory implementation which creates a
FontMgr around FontConfig into its own file, and allows the user
to create one manually.
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1189753007
This is a quick Skia transcription of the Chromium tool at
src/skia/tools/filter_fuzz_stub.cc
to read and decode filters captured as .fil files.
R=joshualitt@google.com,mtklein@google.com,reed@google.com,robertphillips@google.com
BUG=487213
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/1126423005
The macro is only used in CrashHandler.*
Removes SK_CRASH_HANDLER from Android's SkUserConfig, where it is not
needed.
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/915663002
This merges and refactors SkAtomics.h and SkBarriers.h into SkAtomics.h and
some ports/ implementations. The major new feature is that we can express
memory orders explicitly rather than only through comments.
The porting layer is reduced to four template functions:
- sk_atomic_load
- sk_atomic_store
- sk_atomic_fetch_add
- sk_atomic_compare_exchange
From those four we can reconstruct all our previous sk_atomic_foo.
There are three ports:
- SkAtomics_std: uses C++11 <atomic>, used with MSVC
- SkAtomics_atomic: uses newer GCC/Clang intrinsics, used on not-MSVC where possible
- SkAtomics_sync: uses older GCC/Clang intrinsics, used where SkAtomics_atomic not supported
No public API changes.
TBR=reed@google.com
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/896553002
This fixes two problems:
1) #include SK_SOME_DEFINE doesn't work well for all our clients.
2) Things in include/ are #including things in src/, which we don't like.
TBR=reed@google.com
BUG=skia:
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/862983002
This CL cleans up the existing violations and enables the
build time check to ensure that we don't regress.
The motiviation behind this change is to allow clients who include
our headers to be able to build with this warning enabled.
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/726923002
This CL updates various files in the includes directory to ensure that (1) they do
not depend on headers in /src and (2) that they minimize their dependence on external
headers.
To ensure that we don't regress this behavior a new build target has been added to
build a single cpp file that contains all* public includes and is compiled with
only those directories in the include path.
* The exception is those includes that depend on OS specific headers
BUG=skia:2941
NOTRY=true
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/721903002
SkTaskGroup is like SkThreadPool except the threads stay in
one global pool. Each SkTaskGroup itself is tiny (4 bytes)
and its wait() method applies only to tasks add()ed to that
instance, not the whole thread pool.
This means we don't need to bring up new thread pools when
tests themselves want to use multithreading (e.g. pathops,
quilt). We just create a new SkTaskGroup and wait for that
to complete. This should be more efficient, and allow us
to expand where we use threads to really latency sensitive
places. E.g. we can probably now use these in nanobench
for CPU .skp rendering.
Now that all threads are sharing the same pool, I think we
can remove most of the custom mechanism pathops tests use
to control threading. They'll just ride on the global pool
with all other tests now.
This (temporarily?) removes the GPU multithreading feature
from DM, which we don't use.
On my desktop, DM runs a little faster (57s -> 55s) in
Debug, and a lot faster in Release (36s -> 24s). The bots
show speedups of similar proportions, cutting more than a
minute off the N4/Release and Win7/Debug runtimes.
BUG=skia:
Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/9c7207b5dc71dc5a96a2eb107d401133333d5b6fR=caryclark@google.com, bsalomon@google.com, bungeman@google.com, mtklein@google.com, reed@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/531653002
Reason for revert:
Leaks, leaks, leaks.
Original issue's description:
> SkThreadPool ~~> SkTaskGroup
>
> SkTaskGroup is like SkThreadPool except the threads stay in
> one global pool. Each SkTaskGroup itself is tiny (4 bytes)
> and its wait() method applies only to tasks add()ed to that
> instance, not the whole thread pool.
>
> This means we don't need to bring up new thread pools when
> tests themselves want to use multithreading (e.g. pathops,
> quilt). We just create a new SkTaskGroup and wait for that
> to complete. This should be more efficient, and allow us
> to expand where we use threads to really latency sensitive
> places. E.g. we can probably now use these in nanobench
> for CPU .skp rendering.
>
> Now that all threads are sharing the same pool, I think we
> can remove most of the custom mechanism pathops tests use
> to control threading. They'll just ride on the global pool
> with all other tests now.
>
> This (temporarily?) removes the GPU multithreading feature
> from DM, which we don't use.
>
> On my desktop, DM runs a little faster (57s -> 55s) in
> Debug, and a lot faster in Release (36s -> 24s). The bots
> show speedups of similar proportions, cutting more than a
> minute off the N4/Release and Win7/Debug runtimes.
>
> BUG=skia:
>
> Committed: https://skia.googlesource.com/skia/+/9c7207b5dc71dc5a96a2eb107d401133333d5b6fR=caryclark@google.com, bsalomon@google.com, bungeman@google.com, reed@google.com, mtklein@chromium.orgTBR=bsalomon@google.com, bungeman@google.com, caryclark@google.com, mtklein@chromium.org, reed@google.com
NOTREECHECKS=true
NOTRY=true
BUG=skia:
Author: mtklein@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/533393002
SkTaskGroup is like SkThreadPool except the threads stay in
one global pool. Each SkTaskGroup itself is tiny (4 bytes)
and its wait() method applies only to tasks add()ed to that
instance, not the whole thread pool.
This means we don't need to bring up new thread pools when
tests themselves want to use multithreading (e.g. pathops,
quilt). We just create a new SkTaskGroup and wait for that
to complete. This should be more efficient, and allow us
to expand where we use threads to really latency sensitive
places. E.g. we can probably now use these in nanobench
for CPU .skp rendering.
Now that all threads are sharing the same pool, I think we
can remove most of the custom mechanism pathops tests use
to control threading. They'll just ride on the global pool
with all other tests now.
This (temporarily?) removes the GPU multithreading feature
from DM, which we don't use.
On my desktop, DM runs a little faster (57s -> 55s) in
Debug, and a lot faster in Release (36s -> 24s). The bots
show speedups of similar proportions, cutting more than a
minute off the N4/Release and Win7/Debug runtimes.
BUG=skia:
R=caryclark@google.com, bsalomon@google.com, bungeman@google.com, mtklein@google.com, reed@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/531653002
--key describes the type of run (describes the line on the chart), --properties
describes the run itself (describes the dot on the chart).
We'll pass --properties gitHash <git hash> build_number <build number> --key
... to nanobench from the bots.
And... delete a whole lot of dead code.
Example: nanobench --properties gitHash foo build_number 1234 --key bar baz
{
"build_number" : "1234",
"gitHash" : "foo",
"key" : {
"bar" : "baz"
},
"results" : {
....
Friends with https://codereview.chromium.org/491943002
BUG=skia:
R=jcgregorio@google.com, mtklein@google.com
Author: mtklein@chromium.org
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/488213002
Remove unused headers
replace dynamic memory wstream with null wstream.
Use SkAutoTDelete when appropriate.
Replace PdfRenderer class with short function: pdf_to_stream.
Collapse render_pdf, process_input, tool_main_core functions
Split out process_input_files function.
Don't crash when no arguments given.
print out max rss on each skp.
prettier output
R=mtklein@google.com
Author: halcanary@google.com
Review URL: https://codereview.chromium.org/463603002