ff_cbs_delete_unit never fails if the index of the unit to delete is
valid, as it is with all current callers of the function. So just assert
in ff_cbs_delete_unit that the index is valid and change the return
value to void in order to remove the callers' checks for whether
ff_cbs_delete_unit failed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Up until now, ff_cbs_write_packet always initialized the packet
structure it received without documenting this behaviour; furthermore,
the packet's buffer would (on success) be overwritten with the new
buffer without unreferencing the old. This meant that the input packet
had to be either clean (otherwise there would be memleaks) in which case
the initialization is redundant or uninitialized. ff_cbs_write_packet
was never used with uninitialized packets, so the initialization was
redundant. Worse yet, it forced callers to use more than one packet and
made it difficult to add side-data to a packet designated for output,
because said side-data could only be attached after the call to
ff_cbs_write_packet.
This has been changed. It is now allowed to use a non-blank packet.
The currently existing buffer will be unreferenced and replaced by
the new one, as will be the accompanying fields (i.e. data and size).
The rest isn't touched at all.
This change will enable us to use only one packet in the bitstream
filters that rely on CBS.
This commit also updates the documentation of ff_cbs_write_extradata
and ff_cbs_write_packet (to better describe existing behaviour and in
the latter case to also describe the new behaviour).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Currently, a fragment's unit array is constantly reallocated during
splitting of a packet. This commit changes this: One can keep the units
array by distinguishing between the number of allocated and the number
of valid units in the units array.
The more units a packet is split into, the bigger the benefit.
So MPEG-2 benefits the most; for a video coming from an NTSC-DVD
(usually 32 units per frame) the average cost of cbs_insert_unit (for a
single unit) went down from 6717 decicycles to 450 decicycles (based
upon 10 runs with 4194304 runs each); if each packet consists of only
one unit, it went down from 2425 to 448; for a H.264 video where most
packets contain nine units, it went from 4431 to 450.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@googlemail.com>
This way, every CodedBitstreamType->split_fragment() function can
safely assume the fragment passed to them will be reference counted,
potentially simplifying code.
Reviewed-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This saves one malloc + memcpy per packet
The CodedBitstreamFragment buffer is padded to follow the requirements
of AVPacket.
Reviewed-by: jkqxz
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This makes it easier for users of the CBS API to get alloc/free right -
all subelements use the buffer API so that it's clear how to free them.
It also allows eliding some redundant copies: the packet -> fragment copy
disappears after this change if the input packet is refcounted, and more
codec-specific cases are now possible (but not included in this patch).
This is harmless and should not be a warning - unknown units are passed
through to the write functions unchanged, and no other code will interact
with them.