OK, you need
-* A C++98 compiler. GCC will do. (I haven't tried Windows, but it
+* A C++11 compiler. GCC will do. (I haven't tried Windows, but it
works fine on Linux and OS X, and Movit is not very POSIX-bound.)
* GNU Make.
-* A GPU capable of running GLSL fragment shaders,
- processing floating-point textures, and a few other things (all are
- part of OpenGL 3.0 or newer, although most OpenGL 2.0 cards also
- have what's needed through extensions). If your machine is less than five
- years old _and you have the appropriate drivers_, you're home free.
+* A GPU capable of running OpenGL 3.0 or newer. GLES3 (for mobile devices)
+ will also work.
* The [Eigen 3], [FFTW3] and [Google Test] libraries. (The library itself
does not depend on the latter, but you probably want to run the unit tests.)
+ If you also have the Google microbenchmark library, you can get some
+ benchmarks as well.
* The [epoxy] library, for dealing with OpenGL extensions on various
platforms.
correction), mirror, mix (add two inputs), luma mix (use a map to wipe between
two inputs), overlay (the Porter-Duff “over” operation), scale (bilinear and
Lanczos), sharpen (both by unsharp mask and by Wiener filters), saturation
-(or desaturation), vignette, and white balance.
+(or desaturation), vignette, white balance, and a deinterlacer (YADIF).
Yes, that's a short list. But they all look great, are fast and don't give
-you any nasty surprises. (I'd love to include denoise, deinterlace and
+you any nasty surprises. (I'd love to include denoise and
framerate up-/downconversion to the list, but doing them well are
all research-grade problems, and Movit is currently not there.)
TL;DR, but I am interested in a programming example instead
===========================================================
-Assuming you have an OpenGL context already set up (currently you need
-a classic OpenGL context; a GL 3.2+ core context won't do):
+Assuming you have an OpenGL context already set up (either a classic OpenGL
+context, a GL 3.x forward-compatible or core context, or a GLES3 context):
<code>
using namespace movit;
Backwards compatibility is fine and all, but sometimes we can do better
by observing that the world has moved on. In particular:
-* It's 2014, so people want to edit HD video.
-* It's 2014, so everybody has a GPU.
-* It's 2014, so everybody has a working C++ compiler.
+* It's 2017, so people want to edit HD video.
+* It's 2017, so everybody has a GPU.
+* It's 2017, so everybody has a working C++ compiler.
(Even Microsoft fixed theirs around 2003!)
-While from a programming standpoint I'd love to say that it's 2014
+While from a programming standpoint I'd love to say that it's 2016
and interlacing does no longer exist, but that's not true (and interlacing,
hated as it might be, is actually a useful and underrated technique for
-bandwidth reduction in broadcast video). Movit will eventually provide
-limited support for working with interlaced video, but currently does not.
+bandwidth reduction in broadcast video). Movit may eventually provide
+limited support for working with interlaced video; it has a deinterlacer,
+but cannot currently process video in interlaced form.
What do you mean by “high-performance”?
Exactly what speeds you can expect is of course highly dependent on
your GPU and the exact filter chain you are running. As a rule of thumb,
you can run a reasonable filter chain (a lift/gamma/gain operation,
-a bit of diffusion, maybe a vignette) at 720p in around 30 fps on a two-year-old
+a bit of diffusion, maybe a vignette) at 720p in around 30 fps on a four-year-old
Intel laptop. If you have a somewhat newer Intel card, you can do 1080p
-video without much problems. And on a mid-range nVidia card of today
+video without much problems. And on a low-range nVidia card of today
(GTX 550 Ti), you can probably process 4K movies directly.
==================================
Movit is licensed under the [GNU GPL](http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html),
-either version 2 or (at your option) any later version.
+either version 2 or (at your option) any later version. You can find the full
+text of the license in the COPYING file, included with Movit.