The previous commit allowed turning on error correction for interlaced
samples. Turning it off amounts to a no-op for FATE. These samples
should be tested with EC1-3 (guess_mvs/deblock/favor_inter)
additionally.
Signed-off-by: J. Dekker <jdek@itanimul.li>
According to MXF specs the Stored Rectangle corresponds to the data which is
passed to the compressor and received from the decompressor, so they should
contain the width / height extended to the macroblock boundary.
In practice however width and height values rounded to the upper 16 multiples
are only seen when muxing MPEG formats. Therefore this patch changes stored
width and height values to unrounded for all non-MPEG formats, even macroblock
based ones.
For DNXHD the specs (ST 2019-4) explicitly indicates to use 1080 for 1088p.
For ProRes the specs (RDD 44) only refer to to ST 377-1 without precision but
no known commercial implementations are using rounded values.
DV is not using 16x16 macroblocks, so 16 rounding makes no sense.
The patch also fixes Sampled Width / Display Width to use unrounded values.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
These fields are ad-hoc and will be deprecated. Use the recently-added
AV_CODEC_FLAG_COPY_OPAQUE to pass arbitrary user data from packets to
frames.
Changes the result of the flcl1905 test, which uses ffprobe to decode
wmav2 with multiple frames per packet. Such packets are handled
internally by calling the decoder's decode callback multiple times,
offsetting the internal packet's data pointer and decreasing its size
after each call. The output pkt_size value before this commit is then
the remaining internal packet size at the time of each internal decode
call.
After this commit, output pkt_size is simply the size of the full packet
submitted by the caller to the decoder. This is more correct, since
internal packets are never seen by the caller and should have no
observable outside effects.
ISOBMFF (14496-12) made this field ('channelcount') in the
AudioSampleEntry structure non-template¹ somewhere before the
release of the 2022 edition. As for ETSI TS 126 244 AKA 3GPP
file format (V16.1.0, 2020-10), it does not seem contain any
references limiting the channelcount entry in AudioSampleEntry
or in its own definition of EVSSampleEntry.
fate-mov-mp4-chapters test had to be adjusted as it output a
mono vorbis stream, which would now be properly marked as such
in the container.
1: As per 14496-12:
Fields shown as “template” in the box descriptions are fields
which are coded with a default value unless a derived
specification defines their use and permits writers to use
other values than the default.
Splits the currently handled subtitle at random access point
packets that can be configured to follow a specific output stream.
Currently only subtitle streams which are directly mapped into the
same output in which the heartbeat stream resides are affected.
This way the subtitle - which is known to be shown at this time
can be split and passed to muxer before its full duration is
yet known. This is also a drawback, as this essentially outputs
multiple subtitles from a single input subtitle that continues
over multiple random access points. Thus this feature should not
be utilized in cases where subtitle output latency does not matter.
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Nadachowski <andrzej.nadachowski@24i.com>
Co-authored-by: Bernard Boulay <bernard.boulay@24i.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
From x86inc:
> On AMD cpus <=K10, an ordinary ret is slow if it immediately follows either
> a branch or a branch target. So switch to a 2-byte form of ret in that case.
> We can automatically detect "follows a branch", but not a branch target.
> (SSSE3 is a sufficient condition to know that your cpu doesn't have this problem.)
x86inc can automatically determine whether to use REP_RET rather than
REP in most of these cases, so impact is minimal. Additionally, a few
REP_RETs were used unnecessary, despite the return being nowhere near a
branch.
The only CPUs affected were AMD K10s, made between 2007 and 2011, 16
years ago and 12 years ago, respectively.
In the future, everyone involved with x86inc should consider dropping
REP_RETs altogether.
The cHRM chunk is descriptive. That is, it describes the primaries that should
be used to interpret the pixel data in the PNG file. This is notably different
from Mastering Display Metadata, which describes which subset of the presented
gamut is relevant. MDM describes a gamut and says colors outside the gamut are
not required to be preserved, but it does not actually describe the gamut that
the pixel data from the frame resides in. Thus, to decode a cHRM chunk present
in a PNG file to Mastering Display Metadata is incorrect.
This commit changes this behavior so the cHRM chunk, if present, is decoded to
color metadata. For example, if the cHRM chunk describes BT.709 primaries, the
resulting AVFrame will be tagged with AVCOL_PRI_BT709, as a description of its
pixel data. To do this, it utilizes libavutil/csp.h, which exposes a funcction
av_csp_primaries_id_from_desc, to detect which enum value accurately describes
the white point and primaries represented by the cHRM chunk.
This commit also changes pngenc.c to utilize the libavuitl/csp.h API, since it
previously duplicated code contained in that API. Instead, taking advantage of
the API that exists makes more sense. pngenc.c does properly utilize the color
tags rather than incorrectly using MDM, so that required no change.
Signed-off-by: Leo Izen <leo.izen@gmail.com>
segment_time and segment_times are defined as duration specifications, not
timestamps, so calculation of segment duration must account for initial
timestamp. Fixed.
FATE ref for segment-mp4-to-ts changed on account of avoiding premature
segment cut at the end of the first segment.
Defined by H.274, this SEI message is utilized by iPhones to save
the nominal ambient viewing environment for the display of recorded
HDR content. The contents of the message are exposed to API users
as AVFrame side data containing AVAmbientViewingEnvironment.
As the DV RPU test sample is from an iPhone and includes Ambient
Viewing Environment SEI messages, its test result gets updated.
Parsing should probably be enabled for all codecs, at least for headers,
but e.g. the AAC parser produces 1-byte packets of zero padding with it,
so I'm just enabling it for EAC3 for the moment.
Current code may, depending on the muxer, decide to use VSYNC_VFR tagged
with the specified framerate, without actually performing framerate
conversion. This is clearly wrong and against the documentation, which
states unambiguously that -r should produce CFR output for video
encoding.
FATE test changes:
* nuv-rtjpeg: replace -r with '-enc_time_base -1', which keeps the
original timebase. Output frames are now produced with proper
durations.
* filter-mpdecimate: just drop the -r option, it is unnecessary
* filter-fps-r: remove, this test makes no sense and actually
produces broken VFR output (with incorrect frame durations).
Commit 18f24527eb accidentally made side data only packets be handled like a
flush request. Fix this regression by effectively ignoring them as was the
original intention.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Currently, in case of equality on the first color channel, the order of
the ref colors is defined by the hashing function. This commit makes the
sorting deterministic and improve the hierarchical ordering.
Some encoders, like flac, can send side data only packets at the end.
Eventually, said extradata update should ideally be used to update the header
when writting to seekable output, but for now, ignore them.
Should fix the undefined behavior of passing NULL to memcpy().
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
PFM (aka Portable FloatMap) encodes its scanlines from bottom-to-top,
not from top-to-bottom, unlike other NetPBM formats. Without this
patch, FFmpeg ignores this exception and decodes/encodes PFM images
mirrored vertically from their proper orientation.
For reference, see the NetPBM tool pfmtopam, which encodes a .pam
from a .pfm, using the correct orientation (and which FFmpeg reads
correctly). Also compare ffplay to magick display, which shows the
correct orientation as well.
See: http://www.pauldebevec.com/Research/HDR/PFM/ and see:
https://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/pfm.html for descriptions of this
image format.
Signed-off-by: Leo Izen <leo.izen@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>