GStreamer Based Image Signal Processor - Performance - imx8

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Benchmark environment

The following setup was used for all the benchmarks:

GStreamer Bayer10 Support

GStreamer has support for 8-bit Bayer only. To enable 10-bit Bayer support, please, follow this wiki.

Performance in other i.MX 8 boards

According to the product comparison available here:

Family Subfamilies GPU Number of Shaders Supported by GstISP
i.MX 8 QM, QP
2x GC7000XSVX 8 shader/each Yes
i.MX 8X QXP, DXP, DX 1x GC7000Lite 4 shaders Yes
i.MX 8M Q, D, QL
1x GC7000Lite 4 shaders Yes
i.MX 8M Mini QL, DL, SL, Q, D, S 1x GCNanoUltra 1 shader No (No OpenCL supported)
i.MX 8M Nano QL, DL, SL, Q, D, S (Q, D, S) 1x GC7000UltraLite
(QL, DL, SL) No graphics
2 shaders Yes in Q, D, S
i.MX 8M Plus Q, QL, D 1x GC7000UltraLite 2 shaders Yes

For the measurements, we are using the i.MX 8M Quad (Q), equipped with a GPU GC7000 Lite with 4 shaders. GPUs with fewer shaders may lead to lower performance. We have observed that the ispcldebayer (Debayer) at 1080p works at ~22 fps in an i.MX 8MP is equipped with a GPU with only 2 shaders.

If you are interested in optimisation and achieving higher performance, you can message us at support@ridgerun.com, and we will be glad to team up with you on your project.

CSC Benchmarking

The following section describes some relevant performance measurements for the RGBA to NV12 color space conversion for a few standard resolutions. It begins with a summary of the results detailed in the following sections, as well as the pipelines used to capture such results.

Pipeline

All the measurements below were made using the following minimal pipeline.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc is-live=true ! "video/x-raw,format=(string)RGBA,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=(fraction)30/1" ! queue ! ispclcsc ! fakesink -v

Summary

In this summary you can find measurements related with CPU usage, memory, execution time and maximum framerate supported by the CSC algorithm.

Resolution CPU usage (%) Memory Bandwidth (GHz) Execution Time (ms)
640x480@30fps 4 1.020 2.24
1280x720@30fps 10 1.034 6.19
1920x1080@30fps 14 1.466 13.17
Table 1. Performance for several standard resolutions at 30fps

Resolution Maximum framerate (fps) *
640x480 333
1280x720 120
1920x1080 55
Table 2. Maximum framerate at standard resolutions



CPU usage

These measurements were taken with the top app to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running.

CPU usage for CSC element

Memory usage

These measurements were taken with perf stat Linux tool to measure the bandwidth needed by the pipeline.

Memory bandwidth consumption by CSC element

Execution time

These measurements were taken using some timestamps before and after the processing to measure just the execution time for the kernel algorithm on each frame and hence avoiding possible false measurements from the GStreamer plugin.

Execution time for different resolutions with the CSC element

Maximum Framerate

These measurements were taken with the gst-perf tool to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running. When using videotestsrc we are able to process as many buffers as the element can handle, hence the maximum value reported.

The following pipeline was used to test the maximum framerate, please note the use of videotestsrc.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! "video/x-raw,format=(string)RGBA,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=(fraction)30/1" ! queue ! ispclcsc ! fakesink -v
Framerate for different resolutions with the CSC element

Debayer Benckmarking

The following section describes some relevant performance measurements during debayering for a few standard resolutions. It begins with a summary of the results detailed on the following sections, as well as the pipelines used to capture such results.

Pipeline

All the measurements below were made using the following minimal pipeline.

WIDTH=1920
HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 v4l2src device=/dev/video0 ! video/x-bayer,format=bggr,bpp=10,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1 ! ispclbayer10to8 ! queue ! ispcldebayer ! fakesink -v

Summary

In this summary you can find measurements related with CPU usage, memory, execution time and maximum framerate supported by the debayer algorithm.

Resolution CPU usage (%) Memory Bandwidth (GHz) Execution Time (ms)
640x480@30fps 2 1.025 3.54
1280x720@30fps 2 1.084 9.89
1920x1080@30fps 3 1.402 21.46
Table 1. Performance for several standard resolutions at 30fps


Resolution Maximum framerate (fps)*
640x480 266
1280x720 101
1920x1080 46
Table 2. Maximum framerate at standard resolutions



CPU usage

These measurements were taken with the top app to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running.

CPU usage for debayer element


Memory usage

These measurements were taken with perf stat linux tool to measure the bandwidth needed by the pipeline.

Memory bandwidth consumption by debayer element

Execution time

These measurements were taken using some timestamps before and after the processing to measure just the execution time for the kernel algorithm on each frame and hence avoiding possible false measurements from the GStreamer plugin.

Execution time for different resolutions with the debayer element


Maximum Framerate

These measurements were taken with the gst-perf tool to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running. When using videotestsrc we are able to process as many buffers as the element can handle, hence the maximum value reported.

The following pipeline was used to test the maximum framerate, please note the use of videotestsrc.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! "video/x-bayer,format=bggr,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1" ! queue ! ispcldebayer ! perf ! fakesink -v
Framerate for different resolutions with the debayer element

AWB Benchmarking

The following section describes some relevant performance measurements for the auto-white balance for a few standard resolutions. It begins with a summary of the results detailed on the following sections, as well as the pipelines used to capture such results.

Pipeline

All the measurements below were made using the following minimal pipeline.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 v4l2src device=/dev/video0 ! video/x-bayer,format=bggr,bpp=10,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1 ! ispclbayer10to8 ! queue ! ispclawb ! fakesink -v

Summary

In this summary you can find measurements related with CPU usage, memory, execution time and maximum framerate supported by the auto-white balance algorithm.

Resolution CPU usage (%) Memory Bandwidth (GHz) Execution Time (ms)
640x480@30fps 10 0.994 3.11
1280x720@30fps 12 1.032 4.54
1920x1080@30fps 16 1.239 8.52
Table 1. Performance for several standard resolutions at 30fps


Resolution Maximum framerate (fps) *
640x480 365
1280x720 135
1920x1080 62
Table 2. Maximum framerate at standard resolutions



CPU usage

These measurements were taken with the top app to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running.

CPU usage for AWB element

Memory usage

These measurements were taken with perf stat linux tool to measure the bandwidth needed by the pipeline.

Memory bandwidth consumption by AWB element

Execution time

These measurements were taken using some timestamps before and after the processing to measure just the execution time for the kernel algorithm on each frame and hence avoiding possible false measurements from the GStreamer plugin.

Execution time for different resolutions with the AWB element


Maximum Framerate

These measurements were taken with the gst-perf tool to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running. When using videotestsrc we are able to process as many buffers as the element can handle, hence the maximum value reported.

The following pipeline was used to test the maximum framerate, please note the use of videotestsrc.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! "video/x-bayer,format=bggr,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1" ! queue ! ispclawb ! perf ! fakesink -v
Framerate for different resolutions with the AWB element

Histogram Equalization Benchmarking

The following section describes some relevant performance measurements for the Histogram Equalization for a few standard resolutions. It begins with a summary of the results detailed on the following sections, as well as the pipelines used to capture such results.

Pipeline

All the measurements below were made using the following minimal pipeline.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 v4l2src device=/dev/video0 ! video/x-bayer,format=bggr,bpp=10,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1 ! ispclbayer10to8 ! queue ! ispcleq ! fakesink -v

Summary

In this summary you can find measurements related with CPU usage, memory, execution time and maximum framerate supported by the Histogram Equalization algorithm.

Resolution CPU usage (%) Memory Bandwidth (GHz) Execution Time (ms)
640x480@30fps 10 0.990 4.28
1280x720@30fps 12 1.047 6.07
1920x1080@30fps 16 1.277 10.95
Table 1. Performance for several standard resolutions at 30fps


Resolution Maximum framerate (fps)*
640x480 345
1280x720 135
1920x1080 62
Table 2. Maximum framerate at standard resolutions



CPU usage

These measurements were taken with the top app to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running.

CPU usage for Histogram Equalization element

Memory usage

These measurements were taken with perf stat linux tool to measure the bandwidth needed by the pipeline.

Memory bandwidth consumption by Histogram Equalization element

Execution time

These measurements were taken using some timestamps before and after the processing to measure just the execution time for the kernel algorithm on each frame and hence avoiding possible false measurements from the GStreamer plugin.

Execution time for different resolutions with the Histogram Equalization element

Maximum Framerate

These measurements were taken with the gst-perf tool to monitor the behavior of the pipeline while running. When using videotestsrc we are able to process as many buffers as the element can handle, hence the maximum value reported.

The following pipeline was used to test the maximum framerate, please note the use of videotestsrc.

$ WIDTH=1920
$ HEIGHT=1080

$ gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! "video/x-bayer,format=bggr,width=$WIDTH,height=$HEIGHT,framerate=30/1" ! queue ! ispcleq ! perf ! fakesink -v
Framerate for different resolutions with the Histogram Equalization element


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