This patch is analogous to 20f972701806be20a77f808db332d9489343bb78:
It hides the internal part of AVBitStreamFilter by adding a new
internal structure FFBitStreamFilter (declared in bsf_internal.h)
that has an AVBitStreamFilter as its first member; the internal
part of AVBitStreamFilter is moved to this new structure.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
The context structure of the truehd_core bsf had a pointer to a const
AVClass as its first member; yet this bsf does not have any AVClass
associated with it, so that this pointer is always NULL. So remove it.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
The truehd_core bitstream filter decreases the sizes of the
major_sync_info structure (if present), of the
substream_directory and of the substreams themselves. As a consequence,
there is enough space available in front of the actual substream data
for the new header, so that one only needs to modify the header in front
of the actual data (which apart from shrinking is left untouched) and
the packet's size and buffer pointer (after having made sure that the
packet is writable).
This and switching to bsf_get_packet_ref also removed the need for
having separate packets for in- and output.
Even if the input is not writable, there are noticable performance
improvements: The average of 10 iterations of processing a file with 262144
runs each (inlcuding about 20 skips per iteration) went down from 5669
to 4362 decicycles. If the input is writable, it goes down to 1363
decicycles.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Words of 16 bit are the unit for TrueHD's size and offset fields;
in particular the sizes of the high-level structures of TrueHD are
always a multiple of a byte; yet truehd_core unnecessarily used
bit offsets at several places. This has been changed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
1. The loop counter of the substream_directory loop is always less than
the number of substreams, yet within the loop it is checked whether it
is less than FFMIN(3, s->hdr.num_substreams), although the check for < 3
would suffice.
2. In case the packet is a major sync packet, the last two bytes of the
major sync structure were initialized to 0xff and then immediately
overwritten afterwards without ever making use of the values just set.
3. When updating the parity_nibble during writing the new
substream_directory, the parity_nibble is updated one byte at a time
with bytes that might be read from the output packet's data. But one can
do both bytes at the same time without resorting to the data just
written by XOR'ing with the variable that contains the value that has
just been written as a big endian number. This changes the intermediate
value of parity_nibble, but in the end it just amounts to a reordering
of the sum modulo two that will eventually be written as parity_nibble.
Due to associativity and commutativity, this value is unchanged.
4. init_get_bits8 already checks that no overflow happens during the
conversion of its argument from bytes to bits. ff_mlp_read_major_sync
makes sure not to overread (the maximum size of a major_sync_info is 60
bytes anyway) and last_offset is < 2^13, so that no overflow in the
calculation of size can happen, i.e. the check for whether size is >= 0
is unnecessary. But then size is completely unnecessary and can be
removed.
5. In case the packet is just passed through, it is unnecessary to read
the packet's dts. This is therefore postponed to when we know that the
packet is not passed through.
6. Given that it seems overkill to use a bitreader just for one
variable, the size of the input access unit is now read directly.
7. A substream's offset (of the end of the substream) is now stored as is
(i.e. in units of words).
These changes amount to a slight performance improvement: It improved
from 5897 decicycles of ten runs with about 262144 runs each (including
an insignificant amount -- about 20-25 usually of skips) to 5747
decicycles under the same conditions.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Several checks (e.g. when the size of the input packet is too small)
simply used "goto fail", but didn't set the return value appropriately
for an error.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
If truehd_core strips Atmos data away, three parts of the output differ
in size compared to the input access unit: a) The major_sync_info block
if the extra_channel_meaning_data is present, as the newly written
output never contains said block; b) the substream_directory (because
entries relating to discarded substreams are discarded, too); and c)
the actual substream data. b) and c) have already been taken into account
when choosing the size of the output packet, but a) has been forgotten.
This is also the reason behind the end of the output buffer having been
uninitialized until 801d78f0. The workaround added in said commit has
been removed, too.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
The most serious bit of the substream_info header field (in a mayor sync
packet) indicates whether a 16-channel presentation is present in the
bitstream. If set, the extended_substream_info header field contains
information about the 16-channel presentation. This presentation always
uses substream 3, a substream that is discarded by truehd_core. So
substream_info needs to be changed to no longer indicate the presence
of a 16-channel presentation in order for truehd_core's output to be
consistent. This is implemented in this commit.
This change also makes MediaInfo no longer display the presence of Atmos
in the output of truehd_core.
Also, set the (now irrelevant) extended_substream_info field to zero as
this seems to be the common value for ordinary TrueHD.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>