Felipe Contreras wrote:
On Sun, Feb 26, 2012 at 9:44 PM, Luca Barbato<lu_z...@gentoo.org>  wrote:
 On 2/26/12 8:37 PM, Måns Rullgård wrote:
 Felipe Contreras<felipe.contre...@gmail.com>    writes:
 This patch series is a first try of implementing support for TI's OMAP3
 DSP
 algorithms. These algorithms are privided officially by TI and
 distributed in
 many products like the Nokia N900, and also publicly for non-commercial
 purposes[1]. The interface to access then is through tidspbridge driver
 is is
 linux's staging area[2].

 I still object to naming this "tidsp".  Furthermore, it is quite clear
 that the tidspbridge interface is dead, used only on abandoned products
 like the N900.

 libdce would be better?

libdce is for OMAP4, and requires syslink, which is not in the Linux
kernel, nor will it ever be. syslink is truly abandoned, tidspbridge
is not.

Besides, if you want libdce working with libav, you would have to
follow these extensive instructions[1], which of course; require you
to patch your kernel. In contrast, for tidsp to work you just need
CONFIG_TIDSPBRIDGE=m on your vanilla kernel, copy the binaries[2], and
boom.

afaik, gst using libdce in that "OS that is not linux" since 11.10 or 12.04,
so using dce is not esoteric any more. nevertheless its only omap4
still...
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