The only flags, for now, indicate if metadata was updated and are set after each call to
av_read_frame(). This comes with the caveat that, on stream start, it might not be set properly
as packets might be buffered in AVFormatContext.packet_buffer before being given to the user
in av_read_frame().
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Previously this logic was only used if the server didn't
respond with Connection: close, but use it even for that case,
if the server response is non-chunked.
Originally the http code has relied on Connection: close to close
the socket when the file/stream is received - the http protocol
code just kept reading from the socket until the socket was closed.
In f240ed18 we added a check for the file size, because some
http servers didn't respond with Connection: close (and wouldn't
close the socket) even though we requested it, which meant that the
http protocol blocked for a long time at the end of files, waiting
for a socket level timeout.
When reading over tls, trying to read at the end of the connection,
when the peer has closed the connection, can produce spurious (but
harmless) warnings. Therefore always voluntarily stop reading when
the specified file size has been received, if not using a chunked
transfer encoding. (For chunked transfers, we already return 0
as soon as we get the chunk header indicating end of stream.)
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Split return value handling from the actual opening.
Incidentally fixes the https -> http redirect issue reported by
Compn on behalf of rcombs.
CC: libav-stable@libav.org
AVFormatContext->priv_data is not always a MpegTSContext, it can be
RTSPState when decoding a RTP stream. So it is necessary to pass
MpegTSContext pointer explicitly.
Within libav, the write_section_data function doesn't actually use
the MpegTSContext at all, so this doesn't change anything at the
moment (no memory was corrupted before), but it reduces the risk of
anybody trying to touch the MpegTSContext via AVFormatContext->priv_data
in the future.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Its contents are meaningful only if the stream codec context is the one
actually used for encoding, which is often not the case (and is
discouraged).
Use AVCodecContext.field_order instead.