this crashes otherwise, and can happen from try_decode_frame() in the case of decoding errors
Fixes Ticket1602
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
* qatar/master:
rtmp: Add support for SWFVerification
api-example: use new video encoding API.
x86: avcodec: Appropriately name files containing only init functions
mpegvideo_mmx_template: drop some commented-out cruft
libavresample: add mix level normalization option
w32pthreads: Add missing #includes to make header compile standalone
rtmp: Gracefully ignore _checkbw errors by tracking them
rtmp: Do not send _checkbw calls as notifications
prores: interlaced ProRes encoding
Conflicts:
doc/examples/decoding_encoding.c
libavcodec/proresenc_kostya.c
libavcodec/w32pthreads.h
libavcodec/x86/Makefile
libavformat/version.h
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Specifies how the server verifies client SWF files before allowing the
files to connect to an application. Verifying SWF files is a security
measure that prevents someone from creating their own SWF files that can
attempt to stream your resources.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
The _checkbw calls were changed to use transactionId 0 in commit
82613564 so that servers would not return _result/_error about it.
While this is the strict interpretation of the spec, there are
servers that return _error about it, even if transactionId was 0.
The latest version of EvoStream Media Server (the commercial version
of crtmpserver) behaves properly as described, i.e. returning an
_error normally but not returning anything when using transactionId
0. The latest version of crtmpserver (right now at least) doesn't
behave like this though, it returns an error even if transactionId
was 0.
There are also other servers that return errors even if transactionId
is set to 0. Therefore set a proper transaction id so that the invoke
can be tracked and the error properly ignored instead.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Signed-off-by: Michael Bradshaw <mbradshaw@sorensonmedia.com>
Reviewed-by: Peter Ross <pross@xvid.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This function is always called with a non-negative argument, so
those special cases are not needed. In the places the argument
might be zero, the return value for a zero argument does not matter
since it would then be used to scale an array full of zeros.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
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>
There are several reasons for doing that:
1. It documents the code for the reader and helps find
inconsistencies and bugs.
2. For rej_perms, it guarantees the change will be done
even if the output reference can be created by several
code paths.
3. It can be used to predict cases where a copy will,
or will not happen and optimize buffer allocation
(for example not request a rare direct-rendering buffer
from a device sink if it will be copied anyway).
Note that a filter is still allowed to manage the permissions
on its own without using these fields.
The resolution is in the packets, so decoding must happen.
Since most other formats do not set the dimension, make it
a special case for PGS. If other codecs were to have the
same requirement, using a CODEC_CAP would be preferred.
DVD subtitles packets can only encode a single rectangle:
if there are several, copy them into a big transparent one.
DVD subtitles rely on an external 16-colors palette:
use a reasonable default one, stored in the private context,
and encode it into the extradata, as specified by Matroska.
TODO: allow to change the palette with an option.
Each packet can use four colors out of the global palette.
The old logic was to map transparent colors to the color 0
and all other colors to 3, 2, 1, cyclically in descending
frequency order, completely disregarding the original color.
Select the "best" four colors from the global palette, according
to heuristics based on frequency, opacity and brightness, and
arrange them in standard DVD order: background, foreground,
outline, other.
TODO: select the alpha value more finely; see if CHG_COLCON can
allow more than 4 colors per packet.
Reference:
http://dvd.sourceforge.net/dvdinfo/spu.html
With these changes, dvdsubenc can be used to transcode DVB subtitles
and get a very decent result.