Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-18 Thread Øyvind Kolås
On Thu, 18 Nov 2004 12:03:21 -0200, Joao S. O. Bueno Calligaris > Hi...
> So, my point is that for getting the best possible performance  a
> "realtime preview" of any tool not able to do it's job in realtime
> would have to be applyed after the crop and scale in this diagram -
> and them, the Image Data would be changed in a background thread.
> >snip<
> 
> scale down. Thus, even letting most of the work to GEGL, a dual layer
> tree - one for displaying, and one for the actual data,  may still be
> a good solution.

For real time preview, there is only one tree, the tree for
displaying, there is no need to calculate anything outside the view
port,. nor to operate on a full size image.
Even a brush stroke can be considered an Op in GEGL,. during
interactive use that
op would have properties that are the path, the brush used, the paint
mode, and the color used. The path would be grown incrementally.

For both approaches, a single compositing tree that is optimized
according the the requested output size, and two separate pipelines
the same amount of calculation of brush size etc needs to be done. The
benefit of having a single unified tree is a cleaner design without
having to keep track of two data models in the gimp at all times.

/pippin

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Michael Schumacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> and it would be good to have them in the docs, as almost no one
> seems to know about man pages anymore these days.

The GIMP man-pages are online at

 http://www.gimp.org/unix/man-gimp-2.0.html
 http://www.gimp.org/unix/man-gimprc-2.0.html
 http://www.gimp.org/unix/man-gimptool-2.0.html
 http://www.gimp.org/unix/man-gimp-remote-2.0.html

linked from the bottom of http://www.gimp.org/unix/.


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Michael Schumacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> No, they should be - and it would be good to have them in the docs, as
> almost no one seems to know about man pages anymore these days.

We could consider this for the next release. The gimprc manpage is
generated. Since most of these strings are also used as tooltips in
the preferences dialog, a good deal of them are already marked for
translation. With some more strings marked and some minor changes to
app/config/gimpconfig-dump.c, we could generate internationalized
man-pages. Not sure if we should install those but it could be useful
to generate HTML from this. There are tools for this. Alternatively we
could teach gimp to generate the gimprc documentation in Docbook XML.


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Michael Schumacher
Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
Michael Schumacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

At least it could become part of the gimp docs and be translated -
just like the man pages.

The man pages are translated? Since when?
No, they should be - and it would be good to have them in the docs, as 
almost no one seems to know about man pages anymore these days.

Michael
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread David Neary
Hi,

Alan Horkan wrote:
> Would it be difficult to query the operating system and to automatically
> set the tile cache size to some percentage (50%?) of available RAM?

In a portable way, impossible. Having different routines for each
platform, perhaps. It would be nice if glib did something like
this...

The other problem is that 50% of RAM (or even more) is reasonable
for a simple-user machine, but for a multi-user machine (a
terminal server, for example) that might be completely
inappropriate. You would set it to maybe 20 or 25% of RAM in that
case, since you expect to have several instances of the GIMP open
at the same time.

> Increasing the default size sounds sensible given that even most low end
> computers come with at least 256MB of RAM.

Computers which were low to mid range 2 years are still pretty
common - that's a more reasonable target audience. But even 2
years ago 128M was usual and 256M was common.

Cheers,
Dave.

-- 
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Michael Schumacher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> At least it could become part of the gimp docs and be translated -
> just like the man pages.

The man pages are translated? Since when?


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Soren Hauberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> Wouldn't it make sense to to check to amount of memory available on
> the machine before suggestion the tile cache size?

Haven't we discussed this like 200 times already?

> A default tile cache on 128MB wouldn't be nice on a 128MB system (I
> guess).

It shouldn't hurt much since on a 128MB system you will need to have
some amount of swap space anyway. Setting the tile cache to a large
value doesn't mean that all this memory is used.

Actually, if you only have 128MB RAM in your system, setting the tile
cache to 128MB is probably the best you can do.

Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Alan Horkan

On Tue, 16 Nov 2004, Sven Neumann wrote:

> Date: Tue, 16 Nov 2004 12:07:31 +0100
> From: Sven Neumann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed
>
> Hi,
>
> while we are discussing this. Would anyone object if we changed the
> default tile cache size from 64MB to 128MB? Memory is becoming cheap
> these days and IMO it is reasonable to adapt the default value from
> time to time.

Would it be difficult to query the operating system and to automatically
set the tile cache size to some percentage (50%?) of available RAM?

Increasing the default size sounds sensible given that even most low end
computers come with at least 256MB of RAM.  I dont know about other linux
distributions but the Memory recommendations for Fedora 2 are as follows:
  Minimum for graphical: 192MB
  Recommended for graphical: 256MB
http://fedora.redhat.com/docs/release-notes/fc2/x86/

- Alan
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread William Skaggs

Michael Schumacher wrote:
>>>Currently, a user can't really figure out what this setting does, at
>>>least by reading the docs.
>>>
>>
>> http://www.gimp.org/unix/howtos/tile_cache.html
>  
> This is part of the problem - some useful information is kept from users
> of other platforms.

[ . . . ]

> At least it could become part of the gimp docs and be translated - just
> like the man pages.

It already is part of the GIMP docs -- see 

http://docs.gimp.org/en/ch02.html#gimp-using-setup

But maybe it would help to have a better pointer to it.

Best,
  -- Bill
 

 
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Carol Spears
On Tue, Nov 16, 2004 at 06:52:27PM +0100, Michael Schumacher wrote:
> Carol Spears wrote:
> >
> >http://www.gimp.org/unix/howtos/tile_cache.html
>   
> This is part of the problem - some useful information is kept from users 
> of other platforms.
> 
i made this problem.

when i was first building the web site, i had no idea how windows work.
it is a few years later and i still have no idea how that operating
system works.  so it was written for the *nix and the fact that it
worked for windows was discovered later.

completely due to my stupidity or lack of understanding of the system.
i even had access to windows machines, so i cannot even claim lack of
access for my lack of understanding.

the web site was almost finished and a few problems were there like
this.  i think at one point i suggested that it be linked to from the
windows pages.

so all windows users, please forgive me for my ignorance when i misfiled
this information.

carol

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Michael Schumacher
Carol Spears wrote:
On Tue, Nov 16, 2004 at 02:27:17PM +0100, Michael Schumacher wrote:
More important than a specific default value is IMO that the docs 
describe exactly what this setting is for and provide some reasonable 
examples for different setups.

Currently, a user can't really figure out what this setting does, at 
least by reading the docs.

http://www.gimp.org/unix/howtos/tile_cache.html
  
This is part of the problem - some useful information is kept from users 
of other platforms.

i dont think this document could be improved much the ideas are not
simple.  i do know that it also explained to my friend the reason that
Photoshop7 interfered with her Outlook on an operating system which was
not *nix.
At least it could become part of the gimp docs and be translated - just 
like the man pages.

Michael
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Carol Spears
On Tue, Nov 16, 2004 at 02:27:17PM +0100, Michael Schumacher wrote:
> 
> More important than a specific default value is IMO that the docs 
> describe exactly what this setting is for and provide some reasonable 
> examples for different setups.
> 
> Currently, a user can't really figure out what this setting does, at 
> least by reading the docs.
> 
http://www.gimp.org/unix/howtos/tile_cache.html

i dont think this document could be improved much the ideas are not
simple.  i do know that it also explained to my friend the reason that
Photoshop7 interfered with her Outlook on an operating system which was
not *nix.

carol

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Soren Hauberg
Hi,
Sven Neumann wrote:
Hi,
while we are discussing this. Would anyone object if we changed the
default tile cache size from 64MB to 128MB? Memory is becoming cheap
these days and IMO it is reasonable to adapt the default value from
time to time.
Wouldn't it make sense to to check to amount of memory available on the 
machine before suggestion the tile cache size? A default tile cache on 
128MB wouldn't be nice on a 128MB system (I guess).

Sven
/Soren

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Øyvind Kolås
On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 23:08:08 -0200, Joao S. O. Bueno Calligaris > The
point here is no news for us.
>
> The GIMP is not as fast as it can possibly be one day for large
> images.
> 
> I've put some thought on it these days - (just thinking, no code), and
> one idea that came by. What I intend with writing this is that
> everybody have it in mind when making the transition to GEGL - when
> it  will be a favorable time to implement it:
> 
> All images in the GIMP could be represented twice internaly - on e
> with the real image representation, and a second layer stack
> representing just what is being seeing on the screen. All work that
> should "feel" realtime-like should be done first on the screen
> representation, and them processed in background, on the actual layer
> stack.

I think this all belongs within GEGL, these are actually optimizations that
can happen within GEGL, gimp should just request what it wants and GEGL
should magically do the right thing.


Reasoning and explaination of magic follows,. I will be using layer
stack / compositing graph interchangeably in this mail, since the
layer stack / drawable tree will just be an abstraction layer above a
graph.

We have our display,. no data loaded

Display



Then we load an image, either it is memory mapped from disk, or it is
in memory or it is decoded from png each time,. there is no need to
care about it.

Display
 |
Image_data

---

How is the image_data displayed?, we might have a zoomed out version,
that is clipped by the image window we can imagine the Display not to
have two implied
nodes that crops and scales the image


.-[Display]--.
|  display
||
|  scale
||
|  crop
||
`--
   |
Image_data

---

when we want to do color correction operation it is inserted between
the image_data and the display.

display
   |
color_correct
   |
image_data

-

thinking about it directly we would assume that all the pixels in the image have
to be color corrected with this scheme,. but the graph presented here can be
flattened (extending the implied nodes within display) and reordered without it
affecting the final composited image.

display
  |
color_correct
  |
scale
  |
crop
  |
image_data

scale and crop are both affine operations, all affine operations
should, if possible,
be collapsed and move towards the image data sources of a graph (at this point
layers and all higher level gimp data structures don't matter it's
just a large graph
of operations to be processed)

display
  |
color_correct
  |
affine
  |
image_data

when doing changes to color_correct's parameters only, GEGL should be able,
if it has enough cache memory available, to cache the image data resulting from
the affine transform, thus only the changing part of the graph needs
to be recomputed.

The point where such reorganizations become harder is for ops like
blur, which depend on the spatial resolution of the data coming in,
this essentially means that
a "rewriting" pass of the graph needs to change the blur radius etc,
some operations are not possible to reorganize like this.

The problems I outline would also happen for the dual processing graph
approach, and the same meta data would be needed about the ops
involved. Thus what I present here is actually just saying that this
optimization can happen later within GEGL without changing how gimp
uses it.

/pippin

PS: please excuse the lousy ASCII diagrams, gmail uses a non proportional font
and thus make it difficult.

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Michael Schumacher
David Neary wrote:
Hi Sven
Sven Neumann wrote:
while we are discussing this. Would anyone object if we changed the
default tile cache size from 64MB to 128MB? Memory is becoming cheap
these days and IMO it is reasonable to adapt the default value from
time to time.
I think that's reasonable.
More important than a specific default value is IMO that the docs 
describe exactly what this setting is for and provide some reasonable 
examples for different setups.

Currently, a user can't really figure out what this setting does, at 
least by reading the docs.

Michael
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread David Neary
Hi Sven

Sven Neumann wrote:
> while we are discussing this. Would anyone object if we changed the
> default tile cache size from 64MB to 128MB? Memory is becoming cheap
> these days and IMO it is reasonable to adapt the default value from
> time to time.

I think that's reasonable.

Cheers,
Dave.

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-16 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

while we are discussing this. Would anyone object if we changed the
default tile cache size from 64MB to 128MB? Memory is becoming cheap
these days and IMO it is reasonable to adapt the default value from
time to time.


Sven


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-15 Thread Joao S. O. Bueno Calligaris
On Thursday 11 November 2004 20:41, Sven Neumann wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Dov Kruger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > I noticed that gimp is very slow for large images compared with
> > Photoshop. We were recently processing some 500Mb images, and on
> > a fast machine with 2Gb, gimp is crawling along, while on a
> > slower machine with only 512 Mb, photoshop is considerably
> > faster.  I attributed it to a massive amount of work in
> > photoshop, using sse instructions, etc. but then noticed that the
> > default viewer in redhat allows me to load images far faster even
> > than adobe, and zoom in and out with the mouse wheel in realtime.
> >
> > Granted, because you are editing the image, not just displaying
> > it, there has to be some slowdown, but I wondered if there is any
> > way I can tweak gimp, do I somehow have it massively
> > de-optimized. When I first set up gimp-2.0, I tried both 128 and
> > 512 Mb tile cache sizes. 512 seems to work a lot better, but it's
> > still pretty bad. Any idea as to the area of the speed advantage
> > of Adobe?
>
> If you are processing large images and have 2GB available, why do
> you cripple GIMP by limiting it to only 512 MB of tile cache size?
>
>


The point here is no news for us. 
The GIMP is not as fast as it can possibly be one day for large 
images.

I've put some thought on it these days - (just thinking, no code), and 
one idea that came by. What I intend with writing this is that 
everybody have it in mind when making the transition to GEGL - when 
it  will be a favorable time to implement it:

All images in the GIMP could be represented twice internaly - on e 
with the real image representation, and a second layer stack 
representing just what is being seeing on the screen. All work that 
should "feel" realtime-like should be done first on the screen 
representation, and them processed in background, on the actual layer 
stack.

This would allow, overall, a faster use of the tools, including the 
paint and color correction ones.
It could also clean-up some situations like the JPEG save preview 
layer, and the darkening seen in teh current crop tool - as these 
things would not be in the "real" image data, just on the display 
shadow.

In GEGL terms, that means two graphs for every image.
Of course none of this is imediate, and I am thinking on a discussion 
that should mature from now to, say, some 3 or 4 months, if GEGL will 
be put in the next release.

While there may be a first impression that this would take up more 
memory and resources than having a single representation of the 
image, I'd like to put in consideration thde following numbers:
A typical photo I open up for viewing/correcting is 2048x1576 (My 
camera's resolution). That would take up, in raw memory, no undo 
tiles considered, more than 9 Megabytes for a single layer. Each of 
which bytes should be "crunched" each time I make a small adjust on 
the curves tool. 

On the other hand, I view this same image on a window that is about 
800x600 -> 1.5MB in size. 

Of course  that care must be taken for that this doesn't slow 
everything down when 

I know this is no news, it is hard to do, and all that. But it is 
nonetheless a model that we have to keep in mind, for, at this point, 
it seems no less important that implementing tiles had been some day.

Ok, I may  also  have got it all backwards, and there may be a way of 
optimizing the current model without two image graphs at all.  :-) 
But it still a discussion that should be mature in a foreseable 
future.

> Sven

Regards,

Joao
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-14 Thread Daniel Egger
On 13.11.2004, at 07:45, Laxminarayan Kamath wrote:
t's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
hardware is competitively priced these days.

please dont concentrate only on those who can change pcs like shirts,
concentrate on us poor people too. ;)
Actually my focus is on having stuff more modular so one can
choose which method to use and throw out unneeded stuff, thus
saving memory. The mmap idea for instance would be a potential
memory saver since the implementation is much smaller than the
tile cacheing/swapping code we have now and could be configured
to either use space for a swapfile or use the system swap
instead. Unfortunately it would need some tuning to get decent
performance, but since we do not have any plugging facilities
here at the moment the point is moot.
In any case people are working on making everything much more
modular and thus remove the resource need for functionality
which is not used. Granted, the abstraction and the use of
GTK+ 2.x were a huge loss at first but they paid off for normal
users already and will do so even more in future, also for
low-end machines and special uses like headless use.
Interestingly, while there seems to be some demand, it's really
a seldom event that someone mentions those requirements and even
more rare that someone affected by it works on it. So people,
step up show some participation!
Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-14 Thread Daniel Egger
On 13.11.2004, at 08:48, Manish Singh wrote:
shm is a special case. I'm talking about allocating highmem
segments.

So, what is the userspace API for this?
AFAIK there's no direct userspace helper to address highmem
segments; one can only map them in the Linux kernel and
provide them to userspace (or not).[1] Since this does not
lead to any particular improvement for userspace, without
having a patched kernel, it does at least have the advantage
of buffers in the kernel to be allocated from highmem first.
If you need to address more than the typical limits (1, 2
or 3 GiB) per process, you will need to write a kernel
module that communicates with userspace through some syscall
or device.
In case you want to see some real improvement, have a look
at [2] which contains an (probably outdated) patch to have
a real 4 GiB available for userspace.
[1]  
http://www.skynet.ie/%7Emel/projects/vm/guide/html/understand/ 
understand-html.html, chapters 3.4 and 10.
[2] http://lwn.net/Articles/39283/

Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-13 Thread miriam clinton (iriXx)
Laxminarayan Kamath wrote:
Manish Singh 	
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to Daniel, Sven, gimp-developer
 

On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 06:08:17PM +0100, Daniel Egger wrote:
...
t's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
hardware is competitively priced these days.
   

please dont concentrate only on those who can change pcs like shirts,
concentrate on us poor people too. ;)
 

true, this has always been the focus of GNU/Linux - right from the 
start, and there are still projects like Sisela and LOAF which load the 
kernel and basic apps on a floppy disc for primitive laptops (or 
wireless scanning ;)

mC~
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Manish Singh
On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 08:11:54PM +0100, Daniel Egger wrote:
> On 12.11.2004, at 18:51, Manish Singh wrote:
> 
> >>You can, but not using the typical APIs. This is pretty important
> >>for database stuff
> 
> >Whose use case is very different than GIMP's. And you do use the 
> >typical
> >APIs, but the user does have to setup the shmfs on their own. And then
> >you have to select between the shm segments yourself.
> 
> shm is a special case. I'm talking about allocating highmem
> segments.

So, what is the userspace API for this?

-Yosh
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Manish Singh
On Sat, Nov 13, 2004 at 12:15:22PM +0530, Laxminarayan Kamath wrote:
> Manish Singh  
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to Daniel, Sven, gimp-developer
> >On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 06:08:17PM +0100, Daniel Egger wrote:
> >...
> >t's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
> >hardware is competitively priced these days.
> 
> please dont concentrate only on those who can change pcs like shirts,
> concentrate on us poor people too. ;)

Poor people can't afford > 4 GB of ram either, so the point is moot.

-Yosh
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Laxminarayan Kamath
Manish Singh
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to Daniel, Sven, gimp-developer
>On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 06:08:17PM +0100, Daniel Egger wrote:
>...
>t's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
>hardware is competitively priced these days.

please dont concentrate only on those who can change pcs like shirts,
concentrate on us poor people too. ;)
-- 
Laxminarayan Kamath Ammembal
MithraKoota, Bhoja Rao Lane,
Mangalore 575003
(+91) 9845 061385
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Daniel Egger
On 12.11.2004, at 18:51, Manish Singh wrote:
You can, but not using the typical APIs. This is pretty important
for database stuff

Whose use case is very different than GIMP's. And you do use the 
typical
APIs, but the user does have to setup the shmfs on their own. And then
you have to select between the shm segments yourself.
shm is a special case. I'm talking about allocating highmem
segments.
It's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
hardware is competitively priced these days.
Yep. ;)
I've tried GIMPing a 6 GB image on a 64-bit platform (8 GB of ram) and
it handles it just fine.
Duh, my Dual Opteron has only 1 GB at the moment... ;)
Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Manish Singh
On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 06:08:17PM +0100, Daniel Egger wrote:
> On 12.11.2004, at 15:51, Sven Neumann wrote:
> 
> >That allows you to stuff more RAM into your box but you can still only
> >give up to 4GB to a single process simply because you cannot handle
> >more than 4GB in a 32bit address space.
> 
> You can, but not using the typical APIs. This is pretty important
> for database stuff

Whose use case is very different than GIMP's. And you do use the typical
APIs, but the user does have to setup the shmfs on their own. And then
you have to select between the shm segments yourself.

It's a whole bunch of contortions, and all pointless since amd64
hardware is competitively priced these days.

I've tried GIMPing a 6 GB image on a 64-bit platform (8 GB of ram) and
it handles it just fine.


-Yosh
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Øyvind Kolås
On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 11:34:35 +0100, Daniel Egger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> It would be really cool if the pixel data addressing was pluggable so
> one could easily write a different storage backend. On top of my head
> there would be several schemes I'd like to try:
>
> - A simple linear memory segment with COW for new layers
> - dito but with RLE compression (and thus more complex addressing)
> - Line based addressing with COW and aliasing for duplicate lines,
>with LUT for each line
> - Planar memory segments (Shoot now! ;))
> 
> I don't know what GEGL will buy us exactly because we certainly
> need a change from "store those 32bit RGBA values" to something
> more variable but IIRC GEGL is only about pixel composition, not
> storage.

GEGL is about image compositing, not pixel compositing, thus it has to
deal with efficient memory representations as well. In my view of how
things will be after a full integration, gimp uses GEGL for all it's
image processing needs, even the paint tools will most likely be
reimplemented to use GEGL.

The largest problem with making the image representation pluggable is
that it either complicates op (short for image operation, plug-ins in
GEGL) development or adds overhead due to additional copying of values
needed to provide a simple interface.

Layers (or their equivalents after GEGL integration) can theoretically
be unbounded  surfaces instead of square,. there are various ways to 
such sparse allocation of images, and IIRC the tile based caching
system Dan implemented in gegl/gegl/image would allow this.

After integration of GEGL various other speedups can be achived, by
for instance caching static portions of the compositing graph, other
optimizations and rearrangements are also possible on the graph level.

/pippin

-- 
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Web :  http://pippin.gimp.org/ <- that's where my GEGL like playground is hidden
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Daniel Egger
On 12.11.2004, at 15:51, Sven Neumann wrote:
That allows you to stuff more RAM into your box but you can still only
give up to 4GB to a single process simply because you cannot handle
more than 4GB in a 32bit address space.
You can, but not using the typical APIs. This is pretty important
for database stuff
Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Daniel Egger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

>> Of course there's also a physical limit and you would need a 64bit
>> CPU in order to use more than 4GB.
>
> Not necessarily, there some CPU extensions for x86 CPUs which
> allow larger memory sizes by using extra large pages (more
> overhead) or providing additional bits for the paging tables
> which allow for a maximum of 64 GByte on reasonably equipped
> motherboards.

That allows you to stuff more RAM into your box but you can still only
give up to 4GB to a single process simply because you cannot handle
more than 4GB in a 32bit address space.


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Daniel Egger
On 12.11.2004, at 13:12, Sven Neumann wrote:
The operating system imposes a limit on the maximum amount of memory
that can be allocated by a process. IIRC the limit is 3GB on Linux.
Typically the splitting point (user/kernel and peripheral memory)
would be 2:2, but there is a way to easily get 3:1 (if you do not
need the additional GByte for say a GPU framebuffer); hardcore
users may also want to try a 3.5:0.5 splitting but IIRC that will
only be possible with some nasty patch and have several limitations.
Of course there's also a physical limit and you would need a 64bit
CPU in order to use more than 4GB.
Not necessarily, there some CPU extensions for x86 CPUs which
allow larger memory sizes by using extra large pages (more
overhead) or providing additional bits for the paging tables
which allow for a maximum of 64 GByte on reasonably equipped
motherboards.
Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Robert L Krawitz
   Date: Fri, 12 Nov 2004 14:23:49 +0100
   From: Tino Schwarze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   Hi,

   On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 01:12:33PM +0100, Sven Neumann wrote:

   > > [1] Working ain't gonna be fun - I once had an A1 poster at 300 dpi on
   > > an 6 GB machine and GIMP's swap grow as large as another 6 GB since GIMP
   > > didn't seem to be able to use more than 2 or 3 GB of memory altogether.
   > > (Is there a known limitation regarding maximum usable memory?)
   > 
   > The operating system imposes a limit on the maximum amount of memory
   > that can be allocated by a process. IIRC the limit is 3GB on Linux. 

   Ah, then it was probably this limit.

32-bit Linux, that is.  Get an Opteron/Athlon 64 or other 64-bit
processor and you don't have this kind of a limit (it's much, much
higther).

   > Of course there's also a physical limit and you would need a 64bit CPU
   > in order to use more than 4GB.

   There's PAE36 or High memory[1]. You only need a kernel compiled with 4GB
   or 64GB support (the machine was Xeon with 6 GB).

That has nothing to do with process size limit.

-- 
Robert Krawitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Tall Clubs International  --  http://www.tall.org/ or 1-888-IM-TALL-2
Member of the League for Programming Freedom -- mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Project lead for Gimp Print   --http://gimp-print.sourceforge.net

"Linux doesn't dictate how I work, I dictate how Linux works."
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Tino Schwarze
Hi,

On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 01:12:33PM +0100, Sven Neumann wrote:

> > [1] Working ain't gonna be fun - I once had an A1 poster at 300 dpi on
> > an 6 GB machine and GIMP's swap grow as large as another 6 GB since GIMP
> > didn't seem to be able to use more than 2 or 3 GB of memory altogether.
> > (Is there a known limitation regarding maximum usable memory?)
> 
> The operating system imposes a limit on the maximum amount of memory
> that can be allocated by a process. IIRC the limit is 3GB on Linux. 

Ah, then it was probably this limit.

> Of course there's also a physical limit and you would need a 64bit CPU
> in order to use more than 4GB.

There's PAE36 or High memory[1]. You only need a kernel compiled with 4GB
or 64GB support (the machine was Xeon with 6 GB).

Bye, Tino.

[1] Works like EMS from old DOS times. :-|

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread David Neary
Hi,

Daniel Egger wrote:
> It would be really cool if the pixel data addressing was pluggable so
> one could easily write a different storage backend. On top of my head
> there would be several schemes I'd like to try:
> - A simple linear memory segment with COW for new layers
> - dito but with RLE compression (and thus more complex addressing)
> - Line based addressing with COW and aliasing for duplicate lines,
>   with LUT for each line
> - Planar memory segments (Shoot now! ;))
> 
> I don't know what GEGL will buy us exactly because we certainly
> need a change from "store those 32bit RGBA values" to something
> more variable but IIRC GEGL is only about pixel composition, not
> storage.

There are better people to talk about this than me (Dan, are you
reading?) but part of gegl is about data representation, and that
includes its representation in memory (tiles, scanlines,
whatever). I know that Dan Rogers was working on a GeglTiledImage
structure at one stage, which had its own tile manager. Given the
object structure, perhaps some of the alternate schemes you
describe could be accomplished by inheriting from GeglImage and
implementing the extra bits.

Cheers,
Dave.

-- 
David Neary,
Lyon, France
   E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CV: http://dneary.free.fr/CV/
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Tino Schwarze <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> [1] Working ain't gonna be fun - I once had an A1 poster at 300 dpi on
> an 6 GB machine and GIMP's swap grow as large as another 6 GB since GIMP
> didn't seem to be able to use more than 2 or 3 GB of memory altogether.
> (Is there a known limitation regarding maximum usable memory?)

The operating system imposes a limit on the maximum amount of memory
that can be allocated by a process. IIRC the limit is 3GB on Linux. Of
course there's also a physical limit and you would need a 64bit CPU in
order to use more than 4GB.


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Tino Schwarze
On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 04:49:03PM +0530, Laxminarayan Kamath wrote:
> What about making gimp do a benchmaking on the machine and then let it
> automatically decide what method 2 use for that swapping/ tiling
> stuff.. < Hey, now dont beat me. I confess i actually know none of the
> stuff>

Unfortunately, this is not practical because:

a) you don't want to beat the machine for several minutes just to figure
such things out
b) you don't know the usual workload of the machine. It may be a single
user machine (BTW tomorrow it'll get a memory upgrade) or a multi user
machine where currently no one is working or maybe 10 people are
computing like hell
c) I/O intensive stuff may be running (user is burning CD, updatedb
from locate is running, virus scanner runs or the machine is busy
copying a DVD full of video or imagery)
d) Linux kernel is upgraded tomorrow which has got a totally new VM
(which is not very unlikely ;-> )

... add you own

Bye, Tino.

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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Laxminarayan Kamath
What about making gimp do a benchmaking on the machine and then let it
automatically decide what method 2 use for that swapping/ tiling
stuff.. < Hey, now dont beat me. I confess i actually know none of the
stuff>
-- 
Laxminarayan Kamath Ammembal
MithraKoota, Bhoja Rao Lane,
Mangalore 575003
(+91) 9845 061385
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Tino Schwarze
Hi there,

On Fri, Nov 12, 2004 at 02:13:46AM +0200, Steve Stavropoulos wrote:

> > The most important thing to do is balance your tile cache setting, as
> > you've already found.  You want it large enough that GIMP doesn't have
> > to use its own virtual memory, but not so large that the OS has to use
> > virtual memory to accommodate it.  On a 2GB machine, I'd set to about
> > 1.5GB, assuming GIMP has pretty much free reign over the machine.

>  If the OS has better virtual memory than what available to gimp, then
> you would want to use that one. In Linux, I think in most cases, you
> would want to use the (often in multiple disks) swap partitions/files
> available to the OS.

You don't want to use virtual memory if you don't have to. So give as
much memory to GIMP as possible without making the OS swap.

>  If you want to keep the system friendly to other apps as well, you
> might consider a smaller than the available memory tile cache
> setting...
> 
> PS. SOT: many people have more than one disk on their system. In that
> case they should consider these example fstab entries:
> /dev/hdf1   swapswapdefaults,pri=0  0 0
> /dev/hdg5   swapswapdefaults,pri=0  0 0
> /stuff/swap swapswapdefaults,loop,pri=0 0 > 0
>  (you might spell it as: "raid0 swap with three disks")

It has always been pointed out that the access patterns of GIMP are very
specific to image operations - the tile cache is there because it gives
a significant advantage compared to the OS's virtual memory. Besides,
you get the advantage that the tile cache can be a lot larger than
usable physical memory[1].

BTW: You can easily try OS-only virtual memory by setting the tile cache
very large (like all of your swap), then compare whether it performs
better than limiting the tile cache to physical memory (minus some
amount for OS, Window environment and GIMP itself).

Bye, Tino.

[1] Working ain't gonna be fun - I once had an A1 poster at 300 dpi on
an 6 GB machine and GIMP's swap grow as large as another 6 GB since GIMP
didn't seem to be able to use more than 2 or 3 GB of memory altogether.
(Is there a known limitation regarding maximum usable memory?)
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-12 Thread Daniel Egger
On 12.11.2004, at 01:13, Steve Stavropoulos wrote:
 If the OS has better virtual memory than what available to gimp, then
you would want to use that one. In Linux, I think in most cases, you
would want to use the (often in multiple disks) swap partitions/files
available to the OS.
GIMP does tile swapping by hand, so if you hit the limits you'll get
a lot of files in the .gimp directory of your homedirectory or
whatever you set the swap area to.
I once tried to modify this to have the tile cache use mmap memory
with file backing to truly let the OS decide where to put the tiles
(memory or file), however this was a really sad performer so I
ditched the code.
I wonder whether photoshop works with tiles at all or simply uses
a linear memory segment and let the OS do the rest.
It would be really cool if the pixel data addressing was pluggable so
one could easily write a different storage backend. On top of my head
there would be several schemes I'd like to try:
- A simple linear memory segment with COW for new layers
- dito but with RLE compression (and thus more complex addressing)
- Line based addressing with COW and aliasing for duplicate lines,
  with LUT for each line
- Planar memory segments (Shoot now! ;))
I don't know what GEGL will buy us exactly because we certainly
need a change from "store those 32bit RGBA values" to something
more variable but IIRC GEGL is only about pixel composition, not
storage.
Servus,
  Daniel


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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-11 Thread Steve Stavropoulos
On Thu, 11 Nov 2004 23:16:49 +, Alastair M. Robinson wrote:
>
> The most important thing to do is balance your tile cache setting, as
> you've already found.  You want it large enough that GIMP doesn't have
> to use its own virtual memory, but not so large that the OS has to use
> virtual memory to accommodate it.  On a 2GB machine, I'd set to about
> 1.5GB, assuming GIMP has pretty much free reign over the machine.
> 

 If the OS has better virtual memory than what available to gimp, then
you would want to use that one. In Linux, I think in most cases, you
would want to use the (often in multiple disks) swap partitions/files
available to the OS.
 If you want to keep the system friendly to other apps as well, you
might consider a smaller than the available memory tile cache
setting...

PS. SOT: many people have more than one disk on their system. In that
case they should consider these example fstab entries:
/dev/hdf1   swapswapdefaults,pri=0  0 0
/dev/hdg5   swapswapdefaults,pri=0  0 0
/stuff/swap swapswapdefaults,loop,pri=0 0 0
 (you might spell it as: "raid0 swap with three disks")
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-11 Thread Alastair M. Robinson
Hi,
Dov Kruger wrote:
Granted, because you are editing the image, not just displaying it,
there has to be some slowdown, but I wondered if there is any way I can
tweak gimp, do I somehow have it massively de-optimized. When I first
set up gimp-2.0, I tried both 128 and 512 Mb tile cache sizes. 512 seems
to work a lot better, but it's still pretty bad. Any idea as to the area
of the speed advantage of Adobe?
It's true that GIMP struggles with large images.  I frequently need to 
edit 400 or even 600dpi full-colour A4 pages on a 256MB machine, and 
that's sailing pretty close to the wind.

The most important thing to do is balance your tile cache setting, as 
you've already found.  You want it large enough that GIMP doesn't have 
to use its own virtual memory, but not so large that the OS has to use 
virtual memory to accommodate it.  On a 2GB machine, I'd set to about 
1.5GB, assuming GIMP has pretty much free reign over the machine.

The other thing that can help a lot is to set the maximum number of undo 
levels right down to 1, but set the maximum undo memory to something a 
bit higher - maybe 50 or 100 MB.  That way you still get plenty of undo 
levels on small images, but don't waste memory with a long undo history 
for huge images.  I've found that this solves most of the disk thrashing 
problems with GIMP/Win98 and A4 scans.  Linux seems to have better 
memory management to start with, but this tweak can help here too.

All the best,
--
Alastair M. Robinson
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-11 Thread Sven Neumann
Hi,

Dov Kruger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> I noticed that gimp is very slow for large images compared with
> Photoshop. We were recently processing some 500Mb images, and on a fast
> machine with 2Gb, gimp is crawling along, while on a slower machine with
> only 512 Mb, photoshop is considerably faster.  I attributed it to a
> massive amount of work in photoshop, using sse instructions, etc. but
> then noticed that the default viewer in redhat allows me to load images
> far faster even than adobe, and zoom in and out with the mouse wheel in
> realtime.
>
> Granted, because you are editing the image, not just displaying it,
> there has to be some slowdown, but I wondered if there is any way I can
> tweak gimp, do I somehow have it massively de-optimized. When I first
> set up gimp-2.0, I tried both 128 and 512 Mb tile cache sizes. 512 seems
> to work a lot better, but it's still pretty bad. Any idea as to the area
> of the speed advantage of Adobe?

If you are processing large images and have 2GB available, why do you
cripple GIMP by limiting it to only 512 MB of tile cache size?


Sven
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Re: [Gimp-developer] comparing gimp speed

2004-11-11 Thread Carol Spears
On Thu, Nov 11, 2004 at 03:28:14PM -0500, Dov Kruger wrote:
> I noticed that gimp is very slow for large images compared with
> Photoshop. We were recently processing some 500Mb images, and on a fast
> machine with 2Gb, gimp is crawling along, while on a slower machine with
> only 512 Mb, photoshop is considerably faster.  I attributed it to a
> massive amount of work in photoshop, using sse instructions, etc. but
> then noticed that the default viewer in redhat allows me to load images
> far faster even than adobe, and zoom in and out with the mouse wheel in
> realtime.
> 
is this gimp on windows or gimp on linux?

you might need to change operating systems to have your gimp really work
for you.  that asks too much?  dont use it then.

carol

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