According to its description, it is supposed to be the LCM of all the
frame durations. The usability of such a thing is vanishingly small,
especially since we cannot determine it with any amount of reliability.
Therefore get rid of it after the next bump.
Replace it with the average framerate where it makes sense.
FATE results for the wtv and xmv demux tests change. In the wtv case
this is caused by the file being corrupted (or possibly badly cut) and
containing invalid timestamps. This results in lavf estimating the
framerate wrong and making up wrong frame durations.
In the xmv case the file contains pts jumps, so again the estimated
framerate is far from anything sane and lavf again makes up different
frame durations.
In some other tests lavf starts making up frame durations from different
frame.
Useful in cases where a significant analyzeduration is
still needed, while minimizing buffering before output.
An example is processing low-latency streams where all
media types won't necessarily come in if the
analyzeduration is small.
Additional changes by Josh Allmann <joshua.allmann@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
It should be possible to specify usernames in http requests containing
urlencoded characters. This patch adds support for decoding the auth
strings.
Signed-off-by: Antti Seppälä <a.seppala@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This adds two protocols, but one of them is an internal implementation
detail just used as an abstraction layer/generalization in the code. The
RTMPE protocol implementation uses ffrtmpcrypt:// as an alternative to the
tcp:// protocol. This allows moving most of the lower level logic out
from the higher level generic rtmp code.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Add a new option 'rtmp_flush_interval' that allows specifying the
number of packets to write before sending it off as a HTTP request.
This is mostly relevant for RTMPT - for plain RTMP, it only controls
how often we check the socket for incoming packets, which shouldn't
affect the performance in any noticeable way.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This requires all NAL units to fit within single RTP packets. It
doesn't change the actual packetization for packets that fit, but
errors out and gives a helpful hint if the NAL units would have to
be split, and signals the right packetization mode in the SDP.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This adds two protocols, but one of them is an internal implementation
detail just used as an abstraction layer/generalization in the code. The
RTMPT protocol implementation uses rtmphttp:// as an alternative to the
tcp:// protocol. This allows moving most of the lower level logic out
from the higher level generic rtmp code.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Keep the old protocol name around for backwards compatibility
until the next bump.
Deprecate the method of implicitly assuming the nested protocol.
For applehttp://server/path, it might have felt logical, but
supporting hls://server/path isn't quite as intuitive. Therefore
only support hls+http://server/path from now on.
Using this protocol at all is discouraged, since the hls demuxer
is more complete and fits into the architecture better. There
have been cases where the protocol implementation worked better
than the demuxer, but this should no longer be the case.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>