This lets us detect when a container has flagged a stream as multilayer.
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Perform av_clip_int16(val) _after_ copying the value to last_dc.
This change ensures that clipping is applied only within the context of
the current block, preventing the propagation of clipped values to
subsequent DC components.
Related commits: c28f648b19 and dffae122d0
Related ticket: 4683
This avoids hardcoding any implementation-specific limitiations as
part of the API, and allows for future expandability.
This also allows API users to more conveniently convert the
values into floats without hardcoding specific conversion constants.
The API was committed a few days ago, so changing this field now
is within the realms of acceptable.
ffprobe is meant to generate parseable output, and if a field is present, it
should be printed even if it has a default value.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Before After
-------------------------------------------------
make fate-vvc CPU Time (No ASM) 131.52s 134.83s
libavcodec/vvc/* Line Coverage 95.3% 96.9%
inter_template.c Line Coverage 74.3% 88.2%
inter.c Line Coverage 85.3% 99.2%
Signed-off-by: Frank Plowman <post@frankplowman.com>
Also make the iso_channel_position table consistent with what the AAC decoder
uses in avcodec/aac/aacdec_usac.c.
Fate changes are caused by the change of how 7.1 layout is mapped, previously
it included Side Surround channels, now it includes the Surround channels.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Due to hysterical raisins, most RISC-V Linux distributions target a
RV64GC baseline excluding the Bit-manipulation ISA extensions, most
notably:
- Zba: address generation extension and
- Zbb: basic bit manipulation extension.
Most CPUs that would make sense to run FFmpeg on support Zba and Zbb
(including the current FATE runner), so it makes sense to optimise for
them. In fact a large chunk of existing assembler optimisations relies
on Zba and/or Zbb.
Since we cannot patch shared library code, the next best thing is to
carry a flag initialised at load-time and check it on need basis.
This results in 3 instructions overhead on isolated use, e.g.:
1: AUIPC rd, %pcrel_hi(ff_rv_zbb_supported)
LBU rd, %pcrel_lo(1b)(rd)
BEQZ rd, non_Zbb_fallback_code
// Zbb code here
The C compiler will typically load the flag ahead of time to reducing
latency, and can also keep it around if Zbb is used multiple times in a
single optimisation scope. For this to work, the flag symbol must be
hidden; otherwise the optimisation degrades with a GOT look-up to
support interposition:
1: AUIPC rd, GOT_OFFSET_HI
LD rd, GOT_OFFSET_LO(rd)
LBU rd, (rd)
BEQZ rd, non_Zbb_fallback_code
// Zbb code here
This patch adds code to provision the flag in libraries using bit
manipulation functions from libavutil: byte-swap, bit-weight and
counting leading or trailing zeroes.
Instead of an ad-hoc scheme. Also, combine skipping RASL frames with
skip_frame handling - current code seems flawed as it only executes for
the first slice of a RASL frame and unnecessarily unsets is_decoded,
which should not be set at this point anyway..
Some RASL frames in fate-hevc-afd-tc-sei that were previously discarded
are now output.
There is no benefit in using it: The fast path of copying
is not taken because of misalignment; furthermore we are
only dealing with a few byte here anyway, so simply copy
the bytes manually, avoiding the dependency on bitstream.c
in lavf (which also contains a function that is completely
unused in lavf).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
A 360 video specific tool
see https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/stamp/stamp.jsp?arnumber=9503377
passed files:
DMVR_A_Huawei_3.bit
WRAP_D_InterDigital_4.bit
WRAP_A_InterDigital_4.bit
WRAP_B_InterDigital_4.bit
WRAP_C_InterDigital_4.bit
ERP_A_MediaTek_3.bit
Several files already had standard license header (namely
2-clause BSD files), yet due to the 80 char line length limit,
they were not treated as such by source-check.sh (which
fate-source uses). Therefore relax the BSD check.
Reviewed-by: Rémi Denis-Courmont <remi@remlab.net>
Reviewed-by: Pierre-Anthony Lemieux <pal@sandflow.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This commit is the analog of 3f11eac757
for decoding: It sets the AV_FRAME_FLAG_KEY and (for video decoders)
also pict_type to AV_PICTURE_TYPE_I. It furthermore stops setting
audio frames as always being key frames -- it is wrong for e.g.
TrueHD/MLP. The latter also affects TAK and DFPWM.
The change already improves output for several decoders where
it has been forgotten to set e.g. pict_type like speedhq, wnv1
or tiff. The latter is the reason for the change to the exif-image-tiff
FATE test reference file.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
We have test to make sure that certain configurations do print
warnings. However, the normal operation of the muxer within this
test always printed a warning, so those tests to check for
extra warnings didn't essentially guard anything.
The warning that always was printed, "track 1: codec frame size is
not set" was not present in the libav fork where this testcase
originated, it was removed in f234e8a32e.
Set the frame size for the audio stream to silence the warning,
and use this frame size in a couple later calculations, and check
that one test configuration doesn't print warnings.
Setting the frame size apparently changes the rounding of a timestamp
in the ismv muxing testcase.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This is based on a spec at https://aomediacodec.github.io/id3-emsg/,
further based on ISO/IEC 23009-1:2019.
Within libavformat, timed ID3 metadata (already supported by the
mpegts demuxer and muxer) is handled as a separate data AVStream
with codec type AV_CODEC_ID_TIMED_ID3. However, it doesn't
have a corresponding track in the mov file - instead, these events
are written as separate toplevel 'emsg' boxes.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Previously we always assumed that the channels are in native order, even if
they were not. The new channel layout API allows us to signal the proper
channel order, so let's do so.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Unlike what the old comment suggested, standard ASS has no character
escape mechanism, but a closing curly bracket doesn't even need one.
For manual authored sub files using a full-width variant of an
appropriate font and with scaling and spacing modifiers is a common
workaround.
This is not an option here, but we can still make things much less bad.
Now the desired opening bracket still shows up in libass, and
standard renders will merely display a backslash in its place
instead of stripping the following text like before.
Creating vsynth_lena.yuv needs the FATE suite,
yet several tests in ffmpeg.mak without a dependency
on samples used it as input file. Fix this by using
vsynth1.yuv (which does not have such a dependency)
instead.
Also use vsynth1.yuv in fate-shortest to avoid
the samples dependency in this test, too.
Fixes ticket #10947.
Reviewed-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Both samples rely on a feature our decoder doesn't currently support.
Should fix fate failures on some systems where not even the one single frame
could be generated.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The fits decoder decodes to native pixel formats; so
the fitsdec-gbrap16be fate test failed on BE despite
its name because the reference file is LE.
This patch fixes this by forcing a pixel format;
the forced pixel format is BE, causing a change
in the reference file.
The fitsdec-gbrp16be test was not affected, because
its source file (lena-rgb48.png from tne FATE suite)
is actually biendian (as if someone had multiplied
8bit content by 257...).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>