Crates.io | rav1d |
lib.rs | rav1d |
version | 1.0.0 |
source | src |
created_at | 2019-06-06 20:17:25.313432 |
updated_at | 2024-07-19 15:12:40.081022 |
description | Rust port of the dav1d AV1 decoder |
homepage | |
repository | https://github.com/memorysafety/rav1d |
max_upload_size | |
id | 139491 |
size | 10,230,911 |
rav1d is an AV1 cross-platform decoder, open-source, and focused on speed and correctness. It is a Rust port of dav1d.
rav1d is written in Rust and uses the standard Rust toolchain to build. The Rust
toolchain can be installed by going to https://rustup.rs. The rav1d library
builds on stable Rust for x86
, x86_64
, and aarch64
, but currently
requires a nightly compiler for arm
and riscv64
. The project is configured
to use a nightly compiler by default via rust-toolchain.toml
, but a stable
library build can be made with the +stable
cargo flag.
For x86 targets, you'll also need to install nasm
in order
to build with assembly support.
A release build can then be made using cargo:
cargo build --release
For development purposes you may also want to use the opt-dev
profile, which
runs faster than a regular debug build but has all debug checks still enabled:
cargo build --profile opt-dev
To build just librav1d
using a stable compiler:
cargo +stable build --lib --release
The following feature flags are supported:
asm
- Enables optimized assembly routines, if available for the target
platform.bitdepth_8
- Enables support for 8 bitdepth decoding.bitdepth_16
- Enables support for 10 and 12 bitdepth decoding.All of these features are enabled by default. In order to build a version of
librav1d
that disables one or more of these features use the
--no-default-features
flag in combination with the --features
flag to enable
any desired features. For example, to build without assembly routines, which is
useful when testing the Rust fallback functions, do the following:
cargo build --no-default-features --features="bitdepth_8,bitdepth_16"
rav1d can be cross-compiled for a target other than the host platform using the
cargo
--target
flag. This will require passing additional arguments to
rustc
to tell it what linker to use. This can be done by setting the
RUSTFLAGS
enviroment variable and specifying the linker
compiler flag. For
example, compiling for aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
from an Ubuntu Linux machine
would be done as follows:
RUSTFLAGS="-C linker=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc" cargo build --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
If you're cross-compiling in order to run tests under QEMU (qemu-*-static
)
you'll also need to specify the +crt-static
target feature.
RUSTFLAGS="-C target-feature=+crt-static -C linker=aarch64-linux-gnu-gcc" cargo build --target aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
This will require installing the rustup
component for the target platform and
the appropriate cross-platform compiler/linker toolchain for your target
platform. Examples of how we cross-compile rav1d in CI can be found in
.github/workflows/build-and-test-qemu.yml
.
The following targets are currently supported:
x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
i686-unknown-linux-gnu
armv7-unknown-linux-gnueabihf
aarch64-unknown-linux-gnu
riscv64gc-unknown-linux-gnu
Currently we use the original Meson test suite for testing the Rust port. This means you'll need to have Meson installed to run tests.
To setup and run the tests, do the following:
First, build rav1d
using cargo
. You'll need to do this step manually before
running any tests because it is not built automatically when tests are run. It's
recommended to run tests with either the release
or opt-dev
profile as the
debug build runs slowly and often causes tests to timeout. The opt-dev
profile
is generally ideal for development purposes as it enables some optimizations
while leaving debug checks enabled.
cargo build --release
Or:
cargo build --profile opt-dev
Then you can run the tests with the test.sh
helper script:
.github/workflows/test.sh -r target/release/dav1d
Or:
.github/workflows/test.sh -r target/opt-dev/dav1d
The test script accepts additional arguments to configure how tests are run:
-s PATH
- Specify a path to the seek_stress
binary in order to run the
seek_stress
tests. This is generally in the same output directory as the
main dav1d
binary, e.g. target/release/seek_stress
.-t MULTIPLIER
- Specify a multiplier for the test timeout. Allows for tests
to take longer to run, e.g. if running tests with a debug build.-f DELAY
- Specify a frame delay for the tests. If specified the tests will
also be run with multiple threads.-n
- Test with negative strides.-w WRAPPER
- Specify a wrapper binary to use to run the tests. This is
necessary for testing under QEMU for platforms other than the host platform.You can learn more about how to build and test by referencing the CI scripts in
the .github/workflows
folder.
librav1d
is designed to be a drop-in replacement for libdav1d
, so it
primarily exposes a C API with the same usage as libdav1d
's. This is found in
the librav1d.a
library generated by cargo build
. libdav1d
's primary API
documentation can be found
here for reference, and the
equivalent Rust functions can be found in src/lib.rs
. You can
also reference the dav1d
binary's code to see how it uses the API, which can
be found at tools/dav1d.rs
.
A Rust API is planned for addition in the future.