The -shortest option (which finishes the output file at the time the
shortest stream ends) is currently implemented by faking the -t option
when an output stream ends. This approach is fragile, since it depends
on the frames/packets being processed in a specific order. E.g. there
are currently some situations in which the output file length will
depend unpredictably on unrelated factors like encoder delay. More
importantly, the present work aiming at splitting various ffmpeg
components into different threads will make this approach completely
unworkable, since the frames/packets will arrive in effectively random
order.
This commit introduces a "sync queue", which is essentially a collection
of FIFOs, one per stream. Frames/packets are submitted to these FIFOs
and are then released for further processing (encoding or muxing) when
it is ensured that the frame in question will not cause its stream to
get ahead of the other streams (the logic is similar to libavformat's
interleaving queue).
These sync queues are then used for encoding and/or muxing when the
-shortest option is specified.
A new option – -shortest_buf_duration – controls the maximum number of
queued packets, to avoid runaway memory usage.
This commit changes the results of the following tests:
- copy-shortest[12]: the last audio frame is now gone. This is
correct, since it actually outlasts the last video frame.
- shortest-sub: the video packets following the last subtitle packet are
now gone. This is also correct.
The following commits will add a new buffering stage after bitstream
filters, which should not be taken into account for choosing next
output.
OutputStream.last_mux_dts is also used by the muxing code to make up
missing DTS values - that field is now moved to the muxer-private
MuxStream object.
It is currently called from two places:
- output_packet() in ffmpeg.c, which submits the newly available output
packet to the muxer
- from of_check_init() in ffmpeg_mux.c after the header has been
written, to flush the muxing queue
Some packets will thus be processed by this function twice, so it
requires an extra parameter to indicate the place it is called from and
avoid modifying some state twice.
This is fragile and hard to follow, so split this function into two.
Also rename of_write_packet() to of_submit_packet() to better reflect
its new purpose.
The muxing queue currently lives in OutputStream, which is a very large
struct storing the state for both encoding and muxing. The muxing queue
is only used by the code in ffmpeg_mux, so it makes sense to restrict it
to that file.
This makes the first step towards reducing the scope of OutputStream.
Figure out earlier whether the output stream/file should be bitexact and
store this information in a flag in OutputFile/OutputStream.
Stop accessing the muxer in set_encoder_id(), which will become
forbidden in future commits.
Move the file size checking code to ffmpeg_mux. Use the recently
introduced of_filesize(), making this code consistent with the size
shown by print_report().
Move header_written into it, which is not (and should not be) used by
any code outside of ffmpeg_mux.
In the future this context will contain more muxer-private state that
should not be visible to other code.
This is a per-file input option that adjusts an input's timestamps
with reference to another input, so that emitted packet timestamps
account for the difference between the start times of the two inputs.
Typical use case is to sync two or more live inputs such as from capture
devices. Both the target and reference input source timestamps should be
based on the same clock source.
If either input lacks starting timestamps, then no sync adjustment is made.
Frame counters can overflow relatively easily (INT_MAX number of frames is
slightly more than 1 year for 60 fps content), so make sure we are always
using 64 bit values for them.
A live stream can easily run for more than a year and the framedup logic breaks
on an overflow.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Its use for muxing is not documented, in practice it is incremented per
each packet successfully passed to the muxer's write_packet(). Since
there is a lot of indirection between ffmpeg receiving a packet from the
encoder and it actually being written (e.g. bitstream filters, the
interleaving queue), using nb_frames here is incorrect.
Add a new counter for packets received from encoder instead.
This field is currently used by checks
- skipping packets before the first keyframe
- skipping packets before start time
to test whether any packets have been output already. But since
frame_number is incremented after the bitstream filters are applied
(which may involve delay), this use is incorrect. The keyframe check
works around this by adding an extra flag, the start-time check does
not.
Simplify both checks by replacing the seen_kf flag with a flag tracking
whether any packets have been output by do_streamcopy().
Bitstream filters inserted between the input and output were never drained,
resulting in packets being lost if the bsf had any buffered.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This was almost completely redundant. The only functionality that's no longer
available after this removal is the videotoolbox_pixfmt arg, which has been
obsolete for several years.
send_frame_to_filters() sends a frame to all the filters that
need said frame; for every filter except the last one this involves
creating a reference to the frame, because
av_buffersrc_add_frame_flags() by default takes ownership of
the supplied references. Yet said function has a flag which
changes its behaviour to create a reference itself.
This commit uses this flag and stops creating the references itself;
this allows to remove the spare AVFrame holding the temporary
references; it also avoids unreferencing said frame.
Reviewed-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
As well as the custom get_buffer2() implementation which would become a
redundant wrapper for avcodec_default_get_buffer2() after this
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This way the CLI accepts for "filter_threads" the same values as for the
libavcodec specific option "threads".
Fixes FATE with THREADS=auto which was broken in bdc1bdf3f5.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
These were intended to pass options to auto-inserted avresample
resampling filters. Yet FFmpeg uses swresample for this purpose
(with its own AVDictionary swr_opts similar to resample_opts).
Therefore said options were not forwarded any more since commit
911417f0b34e611bf084319c5b5a4e4e630da940; moreover since commit
420cedd497 avresample options are
not even recognized and ignored any more. Yet there are still
remnants of all of this. This commit gets rid of them.
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This allows user set hw_device_ctx instead of hw_frames_ctx for QSV
decoders, hence we may remove the ad-hoc libmfx setup code from FFmpeg.
"-hwaccel_output_format format" is applied to QSV decoders after
removing the ad-hoc libmfx code. In order to keep compatibility with old
commandlines, the default format is set to AV_PIX_FMT_QSV, but this
behavior will be removed in the future. Please set "-hwaccel_output_format qsv"
explicitly if AV_PIX_FMT_QSV is expected.
The normal device stuff works for QSV decoders now, user may use
"-init_hw_device args" to initialise device and "-hwaccel_device
devicename" to select a device for QSV decoders.
"-qsv_device device" which was added for workarounding device selection
in the ad-hoc libmfx code still works
For example:
$> ffmpeg -init_hw_device qsv=qsv:hw_any,child_device=/dev/dri/card0
-hwaccel qsv -c:v h264_qsv -i input.h264 -f null -
/dev/dri/renderD128 is actually open for h264_qsv decoder in the above
command without this patch. After applying this patch, /dev/dri/card0
is used.
$> ffmpeg -init_hw_device vaapi=va:/dev/dri/card0 -init_hw_device
qsv=hw@va -hwaccel_device hw -hwaccel qsv -c:v h264_qsv -i input.h264
-f null -
device hw of type qsv is not usable in the above command without this
patch. After applying this patch, this command works as expected.
Reviewed-by: Soft Works <softworkz@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>