* POV Display usermod
this usermod adds a new effect called "POV Image".
To get it to work:
- read the README :)
- upload a bmp image to the ESP filesystem using "/edit" url.
- select "POV Image" effect.
- set the filename (ie: "/myimage.bmp") as segment name.
- rotate the segment at approximately 20 RPM.
- enjoy the show!
* improve file extension checks
* improve README, remove PNGdec reference, clean usermod
* restrain to esp32 platform + reduce memory footprint with malloc
* updated color scaling to preserve hue at low brightness resulting in much better colors
* replace NPBlg with NPB, moved brightness scaling to bus manager
* improved gamma table calculation: fixed mismatch in inverting gamma table calculation: inversion should now be as good as it gets
* code cleanup, fixed gamma being applied in unnecessary places
Improvements to ABL handling:
- removed strip level handling, ist now all done on bus level
- limiter now respects pixel mapping
- proper handling of white channel
- improved current estimation
- current is now always correctly reported to UI
- minimal FPS impact if the ABL is not limiting but slighly higher impact for global ABL limit due to double-scaling
- moved brightness scaling to BusDigital
- created new header file colors.h to be able to access color functions in bus-manager.
- updated colo_fade() with better video scaling to preserve hue's at low brightness
- added IRAM_ATTR to color_fade (negligible speed impact when compared to inline and benefits other functions)
- added IRAM_ATTR to color_blend as it is used a lot throughout the code, did not test speed impact but adding it to color_fade made it almost on-par with an inlined function
Additional changes:
- fixes for properly handling `scaledBri()` (by @blazoncek)
- also use bit-shift instead of division in blending for ESP8266
- improvements for faster "softlight" calculation in blending
- changed some variables to uint8_t to maybe let the compiler optimize better, uint8_t can be faster if read, store and set are all done in uint8_t, which is the case in the ones I changed
- various minor code formatting changes
Any repeating crash that prevents a human from logging in and fixing
the config should be treated as a boot loop. Increase the detection
timeout, so anything that's fast enough to preclude a user fix will
trigger the recovery behaviour.
Don't treat consecutive but infrequent crashes as bootloops. The
bootloop recovery actions only make sense when there is no opportunity
for a user to reconfigure their system.
Suggested by @coderabbitai
this fixes a very long loop when an overflow was happening in palette blending.
- reset prevPaletteBlends to prevent overflow
- add safety check in case overflow should still happen in another combination (or in future changes)