Hi Jonas, On Sun, 2019-09-01 at 12:45 +0000, Jonas Karlman wrote: > A decoded 8-bit 4:2:0 frame need memory for up to 448 macroblocks > and is laid out in memory as follow: Do you mean "A decoded 8-bit 4:2:0 frame needs up to 448 bytes per macroblock"? A 1280x720 frame already consists of 3600 macroblocks (each 16x16 Y + 2x8x8 Cb,Cr). > +-------------------+ > > Y-plane 256 MBs | So that looks like it should be 256 bytes * number of macroblocks instead, same for the following two. > +-------------------+ > > UV-plane 128 MBs | > +-------------------+ > > MV buffer 64 MBs | > > +-------------------+ > > The motion vector buffer offset is currently correct for 4:2:0 because > the extra space for motion vectors is overallocated with an extra 64 MBs. > > Wrong offset for both destination and motion vector buffer are used > for the bottom field of field encoded content, wrong offset is > also used for 4:0:0 (monochrome) content. > > Fix this by always setting the motion vector address to the expected > 384 MBs offset for 4:2:0 and 256 MBs offset for 4:0:0 content. Expected by whom? For example, could these be placed in separate buffers instead of appended to the VB2 allocated buffers? > Also use correct destination and motion vector buffer offset > for the bottom field of field encoded content. > > While at it also extend the check for 4:0:0 (monochrome) to include an > additional check for High Profile (100). > > Fixes: dea0a82f3d22 ("media: hantro: Add support for H264 decoding on G1") > Signed-off-by: Jonas Karlman <jonas@xxxxxxxxx> > --- > .../staging/media/hantro/hantro_g1_h264_dec.c | 33 +++++++++++-------- > 1 file changed, 19 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) > > diff --git a/drivers/staging/media/hantro/hantro_g1_h264_dec.c b/drivers/staging/media/hantro/hantro_g1_h264_dec.c > index 7ab534936843..159bd67e0a36 100644 > --- a/drivers/staging/media/hantro/hantro_g1_h264_dec.c > +++ b/drivers/staging/media/hantro/hantro_g1_h264_dec.c > @@ -19,6 +19,9 @@ > #include "hantro_hw.h" > #include "hantro_v4l2.h" > > +#define MV_OFFSET_420 384 > +#define MV_OFFSET_400 256 > + > static void set_params(struct hantro_ctx *ctx) > { > const struct hantro_h264_dec_ctrls *ctrls = &ctx->h264_dec.ctrls; > @@ -49,8 +52,8 @@ static void set_params(struct hantro_ctx *ctx) > vdpu_write_relaxed(vpu, reg, G1_REG_DEC_CTRL0); > > /* Decoder control register 1. */ > - reg = G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1_PIC_MB_WIDTH(sps->pic_width_in_mbs_minus1 + 1) | > - G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1_PIC_MB_HEIGHT_P(sps->pic_height_in_map_units_minus1 + 1) | > + reg = G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1_PIC_MB_WIDTH(H264_MB_WIDTH(ctx->dst_fmt.width)) | > + G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1_PIC_MB_HEIGHT_P(H264_MB_HEIGHT(ctx->dst_fmt.height)) | > G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1_REF_FRAMES(sps->max_num_ref_frames); > vdpu_write_relaxed(vpu, reg, G1_REG_DEC_CTRL1); > > @@ -79,7 +82,7 @@ static void set_params(struct hantro_ctx *ctx) > reg |= G1_REG_DEC_CTRL4_CABAC_E; > if (sps->flags & V4L2_H264_SPS_FLAG_DIRECT_8X8_INFERENCE) > reg |= G1_REG_DEC_CTRL4_DIR_8X8_INFER_E; > - if (sps->chroma_format_idc == 0) > + if (sps->profile_idc >= 100 && sps->chroma_format_idc == 0) > reg |= G1_REG_DEC_CTRL4_BLACKWHITE_E; > if (pps->flags & V4L2_H264_PPS_FLAG_WEIGHTED_PRED) > reg |= G1_REG_DEC_CTRL4_WEIGHT_PRED_E; > @@ -233,6 +236,7 @@ static void set_buffers(struct hantro_ctx *ctx) > struct vb2_v4l2_buffer *src_buf, *dst_buf; > struct hantro_dev *vpu = ctx->dev; > dma_addr_t src_dma, dst_dma; > + unsigned int offset = MV_OFFSET_420; > > src_buf = hantro_get_src_buf(ctx); > dst_buf = hantro_get_dst_buf(ctx); > @@ -243,19 +247,20 @@ static void set_buffers(struct hantro_ctx *ctx) > > /* Destination (decoded frame) buffer. */ > dst_dma = vb2_dma_contig_plane_dma_addr(&dst_buf->vb2_buf, 0); > + if (ctrls->slices[0].flags & V4L2_H264_SLICE_FLAG_BOTTOM_FIELD) > + dst_dma += ALIGN(ctx->dst_fmt.width, H264_MB_DIM); How does this work? Does userspace decode two fields into the same capture buffer and the hardware writes each field with a stride of 2 lines? I suppose this corresponds to V4L2_FIELD_INTERLACED. Could this also be made to support V4L2_FIELD_SEQ_TB output? regards Philipp