This makes the wav and pcm demuxer demux bigger packets, which is more
efficient.
As a side effect of the bigger packets, audio durations can become less exact
for command lines such as "ffmpeg -i $INPUT -c:a copy -t 1.0 $OUTPUT".
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
- Remove the 1024 cap on the number of samples, for high sample rate audio it
was suboptimal, calculate the low neighbour power of two for the number of
samples (audio blocks) instead.
- Make the function work correctly also for non-pcm codecs by using the stream
bitrate to estimate the target packet size. A previous version of this patch
used av_get_audio_frame_duration2() the estimate the desired packet size, but
for some codecs that returns the duration of a single audio frame regardless
of frame_bytes.
- Fallback to 4096/block_align*block_align if bitrate is not available.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
The previous threshold, 4 KB, maybe was reasonable when it was set
(in 2010), but in today's settings and with typical network speeds
and data sizes, it's pretty small. 32 KB probably is a more reasonable
default now, regardless of input.
This changes the test references for two seek tests.
When using the normal seek function, which boils down to the lseek(2)
function, a seek to an out of bounds position doesn't return an error,
but that condition is only reported when doing the subsequent read
(which returns EOF). When doing more seeks by fast forwarding, the
fact that the seeked to destination is out of bounds is noticed and
reported sooner in these cases.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Thanks for the discussion. Here's the next version, now with /25 and removed
ff_log2().
The blocksize of the PCM decoder is hard-coded. This creates
unnecessary delay when reading low-rate (<100Hz) streams. This creates
issues when multiplexing multiple streams, since other inputs are only
opened/read after a low-rate input block was completely read.
This patch decreases the blocksize for low-rate inputs, so
approximately a block is read every 40ms. This decreases the startup
delay when multiplexing inputs with different rates.
Signed-off-by: Philipp M. Scholl <pscholl@bawue.de>
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
The bug it was working seems to have been fixed.
This change causes ffmpeg to use the trim filter to implement
the -t option.
FATE tests are updated due to the more accurate handling of
the last packets.
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.
Each fate-seek test depends now only on the corresponding fate-acodec,
fate-vsynth2 or fate-lavf test which creates the file seek-tests
operates on. The tests and references are renamed to match the test they
depend on.