This should be more useful for users since numerical values for channel
layout can be confusing and unintuitive.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The bug it was working seems to have been fixed.
This change causes ffmpeg to use the trim filter to implement
the -t option.
FATE tests are updated due to the more accurate handling of
the last packets.
This makes -t sample-accurate for audio and will allow further
simplication in the future.
Most of the FATE changes are due to audio now being sample accurate. In
some cases a video frame was incorrectly passed with the old code, while
its was over the limit.
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.
r_frame_rate should in theory have something to do with input framerate,
but in practice it is often made up from thin air by lavf. So unless we
are targeting a constant output framerate, it's better to just use input
stream timebase.
Brings back dropped frames in nuv and cscd tests introduced in
cd1ad18a65
According to unofficial documentation, the video rate is locked to the audio
sample rate. This results in proper synchronization of audio and video
timestamps from the demuxer. This only works if the first audio packet occurs
before the first video packet or the audio sample rate is the default rate of
11111 Hz, both of which are true for all samples in our archive.
Update FATE reference to account for now non-existent palette packet.
This also fixes the FATE test if frame data is not initialized in
get_buffer(), so update comment in avconv accordingly.
This changes a number of FATE results, since before this commit, the
timestamps in all tests using rawenc were made up by lavf.
In most cases, the previous timestamps were completely bogus.
In some other cases -- raw formats, mostly h264 -- the new timestamps
are bogus as well. The only difference is that timestamps invented by
the muxer are replaced by timestamps invented by the demuxer.
cscd -- avconv sets output codec timebase from r_frame_rate
and r_frame_rate is in this case some guessed number 31.42 (377/12),
which is not accurate enough to represent all timestamps. This results
in some frames having duplicate pts. Therefore, vsync 0 needs to be
changed to vsync 2 and avconv drops two frames. A proper fix in the
future would be to set output timebase to something saner in avconv.
nuv -- previous timestamps for video were wrong AND the cscd
comment applies, one frame is dropped.
vp8-signbias -- the file contains two frames with identical timestamps,
so -vsync 0 needs to be removed/changed to -vsync 2 and avconv drops one
frame.
vc1-ism -- apparrently either the demuxer lies about timestamps or the
file is broken, since dts == pts on all packets, but reordering clearly
takes place.
Right now those muxers use the default timebase in all cases(1/90000).
This patch avoid unnecessary rescaling and makes the printed timestamps
more readable.
Also, extend the printed information to include the timebases and packet
pts/duration and align the columns.
Obviously changes the results of all fate tests which use those two
muxers.
Return the correct number of consumed bytes and set *data_size = 0.
Returned size is 1 too small, leading to that 1 byte being read as the next
frame, which results in an extra blank frame at the beginning of the stream.
Causes FFmpeg to pass through the correct pts values,
instead of clobbering all to AV_NOPTS_VALUE (the av_init_packet
default) to then make up new ones based on only fps when muxing.
Included are also the related FATE ref changes, which all
some reasonable on quick investigation.
Also set all H.264 references to us -vsync drop to reduce the
diff for the ref files.
Otherwise almost all H.264 references need to change, mostly due
to now starting with negative pts values.
About 20 additional H.264 conformance tests needed -vsync
drop anyway because they create pts values that are out of
order and thus not possible to mux otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>
This adds a "fate" make target which runs the full FATE test suite.
Individual tests can be run with "make fate-$testname".
The location of the FATE test samples must be specified with the
--samples=PATH option to configure.
The tests/fate-update.sh script regenerates the references files and
test list from the online FATE database. These are checked in since
generating them requires non-standard tools.
Originally committed as revision 22552 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk