This makes -t sample-accurate for audio and will allow further
simplication in the future.
Most of the FATE changes are due to audio now being sample accurate. In
some cases a video frame was incorrectly passed with the old code, while
its was over the limit.
The function requires increasing the fuzz factor for the ac3/eac3 encode
tests and even so makes fate fail. It only provides a slight encoding
speedup for legacy CPUs that do not support SS2. Thus its benefit is not
worth the trouble it creates and fixing it would be a waste of time.
Most formats do not support negative timestamps, shift them to avoid
unexpected behaviour and a number of bad crashes.
CC:libav-stable@libav.org
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Signed-off-by: Luca Barbato <lu_zero@gentoo.org>
The sample is already included in the FATE suite, but is not tested
because cropping wasn't fully supported before.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Based on the 2007 GSoC project from Kamil Nowosad <k.nowosad@students.mimuw.edu.pl>
Updated to current programming standards, style and many more small
fixes by Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>.
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
The current code can fail to return the last frame if it contains
exactly the requested number of samples.
Fixes the join filter test, which previously did not include the last
408 samples in most cases.
CC:libav-stable@libav.org
Signed-off-by: Diego Biurrun <diego@biurrun.de>
The gcov/lcov are a common toolchain for visualizing code coverage with
the GNU/Toolchain. The documentation and implementation of this
integration was heavily inspired from the blog entry by Mike Melanson:
http://multimedia.cx/eggs/using-lcov-with-ffmpeg/
These could be used for reference counting, or for keeping track of
decoding progress in references in multithreaded decoders.
Support is provided by gcc/msvc/suncc intrinsics, with a fallback using
pthread mutexes.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>