Lots of video filters use a very simple input or output:
An array with a single AVFilterPad whose name is "default"
and whose type is AVMEDIA_TYPE_VIDEO; everything else is unset.
Given that we never use pointer equality for inputs or outputs*,
we can simply use a single AVFilterPad instead of dozens; this
even saves .data.rel.ro (8312B here) as well as relocations.
*: In fact, several filters (like the filters in vf_lut.c)
already use the same outputs; furthermore, ff_filter_alloc()
duplicates the input and output pads so that we do not even
work with the pads directly.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Lots of audio filters use very simple inputs or outputs:
An array with a single AVFilterPad whose name is "default"
and whose type is AVMEDIA_TYPE_AUDIO; everything else is unset.
Given that we never use pointer equality for inputs or outputs*,
we can simply use a single AVFilterPad instead of dozens; this
even saves .data.rel.ro (4784B here) as well as relocations.
*: In fact, several filters (like the filters in af_biquads.c)
already use the same inputs; furthermore, ff_filter_alloc()
duplicates the input and output pads so that we do not even
work with the pads directly.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
These fields are supposed to store information about the packet the
frame was decoded from, specifically the byte offset it was stored at
and its size.
However,
- the fields are highly ad-hoc - there is no strong reason why
specifically those (and not any other) packet properties should have a
dedicated field in AVFrame; unlike e.g. the timestamps, there is no
fundamental link between coded packet offset/size and decoded frames
- they only make sense for frames produced by decoding demuxed packets,
and even then it is not always the case that the encoded data was
stored in the file as a contiguous sequence of bytes (in order for pos
to be well-defined)
- pkt_pos was added without much explanation, apparently to allow
passthrough of this information through lavfi in order to handle byte
seeking in ffplay. That is now implemented using arbitrary user data
passthrough in AVFrame.opaque_ref.
- several filters use pkt_pos as a variable available to user-supplied
expressions, but there seems to be no established motivation for using them.
- pkt_size was added for use in ffprobe, but that too is now handled
without using this field. Additonally, the values of this field
produced by libavcodec are flawed, as described in the previous
ffprobe conversion commit.
In summary - these fields are ill-defined and insufficiently motivated,
so deprecate them.
This avoids unnecessary rebuilds of most source files if only the
list of enabled components has changed, but not the other properties
of the build, set in config.h.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Up until now, an AVFilter's lists of input and output AVFilterPads
were terminated by a sentinel and the only way to get the length
of these lists was by using avfilter_pad_count(). This has two
drawbacks: first, sizeof(AVFilterPad) is not negligible
(i.e. 64B on 64bit systems); second, getting the size involves
a function call instead of just reading the data.
This commit therefore changes this. The sentinels are removed and new
private fields nb_inputs and nb_outputs are added to AVFilter that
contain the number of elements of the respective AVFilterPad array.
Given that AVFilter.(in|out)puts are the only arrays of zero-terminated
AVFilterPads an API user has access to (AVFilterContext.(in|out)put_pads
are not zero-terminated and they already have a size field) the argument
to avfilter_pad_count() is always one of these lists, so it just has to
find the filter the list belongs to and read said number. This is slower
than before, but a replacement function that just reads the internal numbers
that users are expected to switch to will be added soon; and furthermore,
avfilter_pad_count() is probably never called in hot loops anyway.
This saves about 49KiB from the binary; notice that these sentinels are
not in .bss despite being zeroed: they are in .data.rel.ro due to the
non-sentinels.
Reviewed-by: Nicolas George <george@nsup.org>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This is possible now that the next-API is gone.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
fix the command ffmpeg -h filter=setpts/asetpts both dump the expr
option with "FVA" flags.
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhao <barryjzhao@tencent.com>
A number of compilers, for example those from TI and IBM, choke on
these initialisers. The current style is also quite ugly.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
It is not used in any filters currently and is inherently evil. If
passing binary data to filters is required in the future, it should be
done with some AVOptions-based system.
That's required because -1 is evaluated as NAN, which converted back
to int looks like a random number, this is especially annoying when
debugging sources with undefined pos (as the video4linux2 device).
Signed-off-by: Janne Grunau <janne-ffmpeg@jannau.net>
(cherry picked from commit 3e5bc7ff6a)
That's required because -1 is evaluated as NAN, which converted back
to int looks like a random number, this is especially annoying when
debugging sources with undefined pos (as the video4linux2 device).
Signed-off-by: Janne Grunau <janne-ffmpeg@jannau.net>