According to its description, it is supposed to be the LCM of all the
frame durations. The usability of such a thing is vanishingly small,
especially since we cannot determine it with any amount of reliability.
Therefore get rid of it after the next bump.
Replace it with the average framerate where it makes sense.
FATE results for the wtv and xmv demux tests change. In the wtv case
this is caused by the file being corrupted (or possibly badly cut) and
containing invalid timestamps. This results in lavf estimating the
framerate wrong and making up wrong frame durations.
In the xmv case the file contains pts jumps, so again the estimated
framerate is far from anything sane and lavf again makes up different
frame durations.
In some other tests lavf starts making up frame durations from different
frame.
MMX-enabled systems by default use some dsputil functions differing
from the C versions. Adding these flags ensures accurate ones are
used everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
commit 20e88d8618
Fix avui stream-copy.
The native decoder and MPlayer's binary decoder only need the
APRG atom, QuickTime at least requires also the ARES atom and
four additional 0 bytes padding at the end of stsd.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Convert them to zigzag order, as the rest of them are.
When I was adding support for 10-bit DNxHD, I just copy-pasted the
missing quant matrices from the spec. Now it turns out the existing
matrices in dnxhddata.c were in zigzag order. This resulted in wrong
quantization for 10-bit DNxHD. The attached patch fixes the problem by
converting 10-bit quant matrices to zigzag order.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This change introduces a basic decoder for 3GPP Timed Text subtitles,
also known as TX3G, Quicktime subtitles, or "movtext" in the existing
code.
This initial change doesn't attempt to parse styling information,
and just reads the plain text of the subtitles. I intend to add
support for styles eventually, but it's challenging due to a lack
of existing players that support them.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
This commit is based on libav's implementation and
makes sure to compare output timestamps together.
It also reduces the differences with avconv.
The changes to the test reference files are caused
by an additional packet at the end, the timestamp
of the frame encoded by this packet is always
strictly below the limit stated by the -t option.
The "Default" style written in the header is ignored unless you explicit
it in the Dialogue events (it was valid, just ignored). This requires an
update of the SubRip test since the ASS output obviously changes.
ra144 uses floats so bitexactness cannot be guranteed
This should fix a long standing issue with icc
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Invented timestamps for the h264 tests return to something resembling
sanity.
In the idroq-video-encode test when converting 25 fps -> 30 fps the
fifth frame gets duplicated instead of the sixth.
Some of the FATE changes are due to off-by-one different rounding being used
(lrintf vs av_rescale_q).
Some fate changes are due to 1 audio frame less being encoded (the new variant seems
matching what qatar does and according to ffprobe its closer to the requested duration)
the mapchan feature sadly is lost in this commit because it depends on resampling
being done in ffmpeg.c which is now moved completely into the av filter layer
-async is broken after this commit, this will be fixed in subsequent commits
the new filter reconfiguration system is flawed and will drop a frame on each
parameter change which is why the nelly moser checksums need updating.
Conflicts:
ffmpeg.c
tests/ref/fate/smjpeg
diff -w is not a standard option. This fixes the reference files
to match what the tests actually output and switches to using the
standard diff -b which is sufficient to handle different line ending
styles.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>