This adds hardware decoding for H.264 / HEVC / VP8 / VP9 using the MPP
Rockchip API. It returns frames holding an AVDRMFrameDescriptor struct
in buf[0] that allows drm / dmabuf usage. Tested on RK3288 (TinkerBoard)
and RK3328.
Signed-off-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net>
This patchset enhances Alexis Ballier's original patch and validates
it using Qualcomm's Venus hardware (driver recently landed upstream
[1]).
This has been tested on Qualcomm's DragonBoard 410c and 820c
Configure/make scripts have been validated on Ubuntu 10.04 and
16.04.
Tested decoders:
- h264
- h263
- mpeg4
- vp8
- vp9
- hevc
Tested encoders:
- h264
- h263
- mpeg4
Tested transcoding (concurrent encoding/decoding)
Some of the changes introduced:
- v4l2: code cleanup and abstractions added
- v4l2: follow the new encode/decode api.
- v4l2: fix display size for NV12 output pool.
- v4l2: handle EOS (EPIPE and draining)
- v4l2: vp8 and mpeg4 decoding and encoding.
- v4l2: hevc and vp9 support.
- v4l2: generate EOF on dequeue errors.
- v4l2: h264_mp4toannexb filtering.
- v4l2: fixed make install and fate issues.
- v4l2: codecs enabled/disabled depending on pixfmt defined
- v4l2: pass timebase/framerate to the context
- v4l2: runtime decoder reconfiguration.
- v4l2: add more frame information
- v4l2: free hardware resources on last reference being released
- v4l2: encoding: disable b-frames for upstreaming (patch required)
[1] https://lwn.net/Articles/697956/
System Level view:
v42l_m2m_enc/dec --> v4l2_m2m --> v4l2_context --> v4l2_buffers
Reviewed-by: Jorge Ramirez <jorge.ramirez-ortiz@linaro.org>
Reviewed-by: Alexis Ballier <aballier@gentoo.org>
Tested-by: Jorge Ramirez <jorge.ramirez-ortiz@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: wm4 <nfxjfg@googlemail.com>
The filter supports two inputs and (implicitly) scaling the second input
during composition, unlike the software overlay.
The code has been separated into common interface and qsv overlay
implementation. The common part mainly creates the qsv session and
manages the surface which is nearly the same for all qsv filters.
So the qsvvpp.c/qsvvpp.h API can be used by other QSV vpp filters
to reduce code redundancy.
Usage:
-hwaccel qsv -c:v mpeg2_qsv -r 25 -i in.m2v -hwaccel qsv -c:v h264_qsv
-i in.h264 -filter_complex
"overlay_qsv=eof_action=repeat:x=(W-w)/2:y=(H-h)/2" -b 2M -maxrate 3M
-c:v h264_qsv -y out.h264
Two inputs should have different sizes otherwise one will be completely
covered or you need to scale the second input as follows:
-hwaccel qsv -c:v mpeg2_qsv -r 25 -i in.m2v -hwaccel qsv -c:v h264_qsv
-i in.h264 -filter_complex
"overlay_qsv=w=720:h=576:x=(W-w)/2:y=(H-h)/2" -b 2M -maxrate 3M -c:v
h264_qsv -y out.h264
Signed-off-by: ChaoX A Liu <chaox.a.liu@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Zhengxu Huang <zhengxu.maxwell@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Zhang <huazh407@gmail.com>
Change-Id: I5c381febb0af6e2f9622c54ba00490ab99d48297
Signed-off-by: Maxym Dmytrychenko <maxim.d33@gmail.com>
This one changes the previous vmaf patch to libvmaf to keep it separate from the
native implementation of vmaf inside ffmpeg later.
Signed-off-by: Ashish Singh <ashk43712@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
This also adds support to avconv (which is trivial due to the new
hwaccel API being generic enough).
The new decoder setup code in dxva2.c is significantly based on work by
Steve Lhomme <robux4@gmail.com>, but with heavy changes/rewrites.
Merges Libav commit f9e7a2f95a.
Also adds untested VP9 support.
The check for DXVA2 COBJs is removed. Just update your MinGW to
something newer than a 5 year old release.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
NASM is more actively maintained and permits generating dependency information
as a sideeffect of assembling, thus cutting build times in half.
(Cherry-picked from libav commit 57b753b445)
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This also adds support to avconv (which is trivial due to the new
hwaccel API being generic enough).
The new decoder setup code in dxva2.c is significantly based on work by
Steve Lhomme <robux4@gmail.com>, but with heavy changes/rewrites.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
The library has stopped being developed and Debian has removed it
from its repositories citing security issues.
The native Dirac decoder supports everything the library has and basic
encoding support is still provided via the native vc2 (Dirac Pro, intra
only version of Dirac) encoder. Hence, there's no reason to still support
linking to the library and potentially leading users into security issues.