While a 25 fps stream can in general store frame durations in 1/25
units, this is not true for the timestamps. For example a 25fps
and a 25000/1001 fps stream when they are stored together might have
a matching 0 timestamp point but when for example a chapter from
this is cut the new start is no longer aligned. The issue gets
MUCH worse when the streams are lower fps, like 1 or 2 fps.
This commit thus makes the muxer choose a multiple of the
framerate as timebase that is at least about 20 micro seconds precise
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
With this, when we use a finer timebase than neccessary to store
durations the demuxer still knows what the original timebase was.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Instead of saving huge raw files, use the md5: output pseudo-protocol
to calculate the checksum of the file directly. This is especially
useful when testing on remote targets as it avoids transferring 3.6GB
over the network.
(cherry picked from commit f4b1e21a63)
Instead of saving huge raw files, use the md5: output pseudo-protocol
to calculate the checksum of the file directly. This is especially
useful when testing on remote targets as it avoids transferring 3.6GB
over the network.
The corresponding lavfi-pixfmts BE tests are not yet added, as there
are some bugs in the scaler (scaling rgba, argb, bgra, abgr, yuva420p)
which result in differences with the LE reference, and I cannot
visually check the generated files on BE.
Originally committed as revision 24657 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk