It seems like the code to initialize and run the opencl kernel was lost in this commit:
I'm not familiar enough with the codebase to understand the commit message. Why was this functionality removed?
Should I add the deleted code into video degradation's process function?
Thanks,
Nanley
On Wed, Nov 19, 2014 at 12:57 AM, Nanley Chery <nanleychery@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I noticed there was more to the brightness-contrast example. I made the adjustments concerning the kernel name and parameter values.The code compiles now. The current problem that I'm experiencing is that the run-composition.py test for video-degradation passes with an empty kernel.I'm not sure which code paths are executing to make this work. Any pointers? I'll do some grepping of the source tree in the meantime.Thanks,NanleyOn Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 8:22 PM, Nanley Chery <nanleychery@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Wow. Thank you for the tip, CL_CHECK is now giving me an output.This is the error message:(lt-gegl:10486): GEGL-video-degradation.c-WARNING **: Error in video-degradation.c:236@cl_process - invalid kernelI thought that I had followed the kernel compilation process correctly. Do you notice any mistake? I have pushed my latest change to the branch.NanleyOn Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 8:06 PM, Victor Oliveira <victormatheus@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:Hi Nanley,
I'd recommend you follow operations/common/brightness-contrast.c file
for a point-filter operation (i.e. a pixel-wise filter) instead of
doing what you did.
Notice that in operations/common/brightness-contrast.c#n153 there's a
string brightness_contrast_cl_source which is a string in
opencl/brightness-contrast.cl.h, these are auto-generated files from
the kernels in the opencl folder.
Let me know what happens from that.
Victor
On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 4:45 PM, Nanley Chery <nanleychery@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Hi Victor,
>
> Thank you very much for taking a look. I understand about the time.
>
> Here's the link to my bitbucket branch:
> https://bitbucket.org/nanoman281/gegl-cse6230/branch/vid_upstrm
>
> The latest commit is what's causing the video-degradation.xml test to fail
> (I'm testing using run-compositions.py).
>
> Nanley
>
> On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 5:11 PM, Victor Oliveira <victormatheus@xxxxxxxxx>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Nanley,
>>
>> Just to let you know, I'll need some time to answer that because I'll
>> need to build GIMP on my new laptop.
>>
>> Can you share your code so I can give a look?
>>
>> Victor
>>
>> On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 12:49 PM, Nanley Chery <nanleychery@xxxxxxxxx>
>> wrote:
>> > Hi Victor,
>> >
>> > I'm a student working on OpenCL porting work for my High Performance
>> > Computing class. I'm trying to implement an OpenCL port for the
>> > newly-committed video-degradation operation. Are you willing to provide
>> > guidance on the following roadblock?
>> >
>> >
>> > The issue that I'm finding is that creating a cl_process method and
>> > setting
>> > the following variables in gegl_op_class_init is not enough to get the
>> > cl_process method called:
>> >
>> > operation_class->opencl_support = TRUE;
>> > point_filter_class->cl_process = cl_process;
>> >
>> > If I manually try to call the cl_process function in the process method
>> > (like in edge-laplace.c), the program terminates in the
>> > gegl_cl_set_kernel_args method without an error from CL_CHECK;
>> >
>> > Is there something I'm missing? I apologize for mailing you directly
>> > instead
>> > of writing to the mailing list. I'm a little pressed for time, so I
>> > opted
>> > for this option.
>> >
>> > Regards,
>> > Nanley
>
>
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