When AVFMT_FLAG_FAST_SEEK is specified, make MP3 seek operation as
fast as possible.
When no "-usetoc" is specified, the default operation is using TOC
if available; otherwise, uses linear interpolation. This is useful
when seeking a large MP3 file with no TOC available. One example is
Podcast, many MP3 files are large, but no CBR/VBR tags. Most of
them are actually CBR. Even in VBR cases, this option sacrifices the
accuracy of playback time in exchange for responsiveness.
The code is simply broken, the read packets are not aligned to
the mp3 frames, the file end or the id3 tag thus this simply
cannot reliably find the ID3v1 tag to remove it
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Apparently it can happen that a mp3 file has junk data between id3 tag
and actual mp3 data. Skip this to avoid outputting nonsense timestamps.
(Two packets had the same timestamps, because the mp3 parser failed to
compute a frame duration.)
In this case, the junk consisted of 1044 bytes of zero, which
incidentally is the same size as normal mp3 frames in this stream. I
suspect the mp3 was edited with some tool which wiped the Xing/LAME
headers. Data near the end of the file suggests it was encoded with
"LAME3.97", but the normal Xing/LAME headers are missing. So this could
be "normal". mpg123 also attempts to skip at least 64KB of junk data by
scanning for headers.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
If the file size is much larger than what is indicated in the XING
header, the demuxer assumes it's a concatenated file, and throws away
the (presumably) incorrect duration information. Unfortunately, this
also triggers if the id3 tags are very large (embedded pictures and
such). Then the half-baked heuristic not only breaks the duration
display, but also gapless audio.
Fix it by subtracting the size of the headers (the check is off by some
bytes, but that doesn't matter at all). Note that there could be an
arbitrary amount of tags _after_ the mp3 data, but hopefully these are
not too large to trigger the heuristic in practice.
Also add a warning when this happens.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
It's the most useful mode, because it seeks accurately, and does not
break features like gapless audio.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
"-usetoc 2" now invokes the generic seek and indexing mode. This mode
skips data until the seek target is reached, and this is exact. It also
makes gapless audio actually work if a seek past the start of the file
is involved.
Change the fate-gapless-mp3 test to use the new mode, and move the old
one to fate-gapless-mp3-toc (since the test forces use of the Xing TOC).
The new mode has a different result for the seek - this result is
actually correct.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The mp2 seek test results change. Whether to skip samples if the file
had no LAME gapless tags was inconsistent. When seeking to the start
of the file, 529 samples were skipped, but when playing from start,
nothing was skipped. This commit changes the behavior on seek to skip
nothing.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
With this the returned timestamp should match the packet instead of
the requested timestamp, which may lay between packets
Reviewed-by: wm4 <nfxjfg@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Removing a bunch of questionable hacks makes it work. These hacks
apparently try to make concatenated mp3s with Lame headers seekable,
which doesn't make too much sense anyway. The main change is that we
trust the Xing header file size field now (the same field is used for
seeking with Xing TOC). Note that a mp3 might contain an unknown number
of unsupported additional tags, so we can't reliably compute this size
manually.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Having more than 10 consecutive frames decoded as mp3 should be
considered a clear signal that the sample is mp3 and not mpegps.
Reported-By: Florian Iragne <florian@iragne.fr>
CC: libav-stable@libav.org
The quality scale field is only supposed to be present if the fourth bit
is set. In practice, lame always sets it, but other tools might not.
CC:libav-stable@libav.org
Consider a file created with something like:
cat file1.mp3 file2.mp3 > result.mp3
Then if file2.mp3 has gapless information, result.mp3 would stop playing
something in the middle. This happens because the gapless info directs
the decoder to discard all samples after a certain position. To make
matters worse, the gapless info of file2.mp3 will be used when playing
the file1.mp3 part, because the gapless info is located at the end of
the file.
While handling concatenated gapless files correctly would be insane and
a lot of effort (especially without scanning the whole file on opening),
it's easy to prevent at least early EOF. Playback will happen to work,
even if it's slightly broken.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The code already had skipping of initial padding, but discarding
trailing frame padding was missing.
This is somewhat questionable, because it will make the decoder discard
any data after the declared file size in the LAME header. But note that
skipping full frames at the end of the stream is required. Encoders
actually create such files.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
When a id3 tag is larger than the amount of space we will probe
give it a score similar to what a .mp3 extension would have given it
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The toc is inexact and not using it can thus make sense.
Using it is faster though, thus the opposite can similarly makes sense
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>