On Fri, Mar 13, 2015 at 3:06 PM, Michael Niedermayer <michae...@gmx.at> wrote: > On Fri, Mar 13, 2015 at 02:34:08PM -0300, Claudio Freire wrote: >> On Fri, Mar 13, 2015 at 12:39 PM, Nedeljko Babic >> <nedeljko.ba...@imgtec.com> wrote: >> >> btw, i use the qemu from https://github.com/ssvb/QEMU.git >> >> for mips as it at least years ago supported more extensions, i >> >> would have guessed these where merged into main qemu but as you list >> >> all the disables in the wiki, maybe i was guessing wrong >> > >> > I can confirm that main qemu supports both fpu and dspr1/dspr2 extension. >> > Appropriate cpu model needs to be selected in order for the extension to >> > be available. >> > 74Kf supports all extensions, so adding "-cpu 74Kf" in "--target-exec" >> > should enable fpu, dspr1 and dspr2 extensions. >> >> As I was building on a more complete reply, the problem I have is with >> the glibc, which is built with the soft float ABI. >> > >> As soon as I finish all the tests (they take a while) I'll post more > > they really shouldnt take much time > > a build (with ccache) should be quite fast and you only need to test > make -j<num> fate-aac-s7350-encode > > can it be that theres some float rounding somewhere that leads to a > different decission that causes this ?
Soft float is slow, add emulation and it's worse. The build is fast enough, it's the tests the ones that are slow. I'm going to try adding a hard-float version of the glibc in opensuse's build service. But first I want to get the patch that fixes mips tests verified. _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel