The initial testing of the VFW binary codec was flawed,
likely due to an AviSynth bug.
Re-testing using VirtualDub and various professional editing
applications has revealed it should have been flipped.
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
This change requires the user to specify min and max value, and makes
possible to prevent the user to set AV_{SAMPLE,PIX}_FMT_NONE if
forbidden.
Add required ifdeffery in case of mixed libraries, when libavutil is
updated but not the other libraries.
This is a followup of 08d0969c14.
Add capability of reading multiple frames instead of only first.
Implement support for different gif frame 'disposal methods'.
Add option that allows to change background color resulting from
conversion of gif with transparency to any other format which
not support it.
Also bump lavc minor version.
Signed-off-by: Vitaliy E Sugrobov <vsugrob@hotmail.com>
Use the i64 field rather than the string value. Using a string to set a
default sample/pixel format is weird, also the new interface is more
consistent with the rest of the API.
This is technically an API break, but hopefully there are no applications
using this feature outside of FFmpeg. In order to save backward
compatibility with mixed libraries in case libavutil is updated but not
the other libraries, some ifdeffery hacks are added.
Note that the version check is only performed when class->version != 0,
since if it is not defined then we assume that no version was defined and
the class is not affected by the change.
We will luckily get rid of the hack at the next major bump.
PIX is an image file format that was used by the BRender 3d engine.
Signed-off-by: Aleksi Nurmi <aleksi.nurmi@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This isn't too useful as a normal codec, but can be used in
voip style applications. The decoder updates the noise
generator parameters when a packet is given to it for decoding,
but if called with an empty packet, it generates more noise
according to the last parameters.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This commit introduces a new packet side data type for the subtitle
position information. This is meant to be used by the SRT format where
that information is stored along with the timing, which is not part of
the subrip packets.
This commit introduces a new AVPacket side data type:
AV_PKT_DATA_STRINGS_METADATA. Its main goal is to provide a way to
transmit the metadata from the AVFilterBufferRef up to the AVFrame. This
is at the moment "only" useful for lavfi input from libavdevice:
lavd/lavfi only outputs packets, and the metadata from the buffer ref
kept in its context needs to be transmitted from the packet to the frame
by the decoders. The buffer ref can be destroyed at any time (along with
the metadata), and a duplication of the AVPacket needs to duplicate the
metadata as well, so the choice of using the side data to store them was
selected.
Making sure lavd/lavfi raises the metadata is useful to allow tools like
ffprobe to access the filters metadata (it is at the moment the only
way); ffprobe will now automatically show the AVFrame metadata in any
customizable output format for users. API users will also be able to
access the AVFrame->metadata pointer the same way ffprobe does
(av_frame_get_metadata).
All the changes are done in this single commit to avoid some memory
leaks: for instances, the changes in lavfi/avcodec.c are meant to
duplicate the metadata from the buffer ref into the AVFrame. Unless we
have an internal way of freeing the AVFrame->metadata automatically, it
will leak in most of the user apps. To fix this problem, we introduce
AVCodecContext->metadata and link avctx->metadata to the current
frame->metadata and free it at each decode frame call (and in the codec
closing callback for the last one). But doing this also means to update
the way the tiff decoder already handles the AVFrame->metadata (it's the
only one decoder with frame metadata at the moment), by making sure it
is not trying to free a pointer already freed by the lavc internals.
The lavfi/avcodec.c buffer ref code is based on an old Thomas Kühnel
work, the rest of the code belongs to the commit author.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Kühnel <kuehnelth@googlemail.com>
Signed-off-by: Clément Bœsch <ubitux@gmail.com>
Japanese DTV uses some non standard extensions in AAC audio.
One example is 'dual mono', which combines two independent
audio into one stereo stream, storing them in left and right channels
respectively. Historically, dual mono audio has been used for
multi-lingual audio, one for local/native language, and another for english,
and usually the "main" (local language) channel should be output without
any user interactions.
The frames of those dual mono audio are allowed to set
ADTS channel_config field to 0, and just contain two SCE's *WITHOUT* PCE,
which is a non standard extension by Japanese DTV standard.
(ref. ARIB STD-B32 PartII 5.2.3)
This patch adds an AVPacket side data, AV_PKT_DATA_JP_DUALMONO,
which indicates that the AVPacket is likely to contain an audio frame
with the above dual mono extension, and has the parameter to specify
the desired channel selection in that case.
It also makes aacdec to detect dual mono and output just the desired
channel when this side data is attached.
Signed-off-by: Akihiro Tsukada <atsukada@users.sourceforge.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Unsurprisingly, if a timing-less subrip decoder is desireable, an
encoder is as well. With this in place, we can move on to remove
the use of the old encoder/decoder with embedded timing and move
all timing handling the (de)muxer where they belong.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
Note that the symbols used to run the hardware decoder in asynchronous mode
have been marked deprecated and will be dropped at a future version bump.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
Note that the symbols used to run the hardware decoder in asynchronous mode
has been marked as deprecated and will be dropped at a future version dump.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This change introduces a basic encoder for 3GPP Timed Text subtitles,
also known as TX3G, Quicktime subtitles, or "movtext" in the existing
code.
This initial change doesn't attempt to write styling information,
and just writes 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.
Note that an additional change is required to the mov/mp4 muxer to
write empty subtitle packets to indicate subtitle duration.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>