Several places in the code currently call init_output_stream_wrapper(),
which in turn calls init_output_stream(), which then calls either
enc_open() or init_output_stream_streamcopy(), followed by
of_stream_init(), which tells the muxer the stream is ready for muxing.
All except one of these callers are in the encoding code, which will be
moved to ffmpeg_enc.c. Keeping this structure would then necessitate
ffmpeg_enc.c calling back into the common code in ffmpeg.c, which would
then just call ffmpeg_mux, thus making the already convoluted call chain
even more so.
Simplify the situation by using separate paths for filter-fed output
streams (audio and video encoders) and others (subtitles, streamcopy,
data, attachments).
Encoder initialization is currently split rather arbitrarily between
init_output_stream_encode() and init_output_stream(). Move all of it to
init_output_stream_encode().
The code currently uses lavfi for this, which creates a sort of
configuration dependency loop - the encoder should be ideally
initialized with information from the first audio frame, but to get this
frame one needs to first open the encoder to know the frame size. This
necessitates an awkward workaround, which causes audio handling to be
different from video.
With this change, audio encoder initialization is congruent with video.
Frame counters can overflow relatively easily (INT_MAX number of frames is
slightly more than 1 year for 60 fps content), so make sure we use 64 bit
values for them.
Also deprecate the old 32 bit frame_number attribute.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Analogous to -enc_stats*, but happens right before muxing. Useful
because bitstream filters and the sync queue can modify packets after
encoding and before muxing. Also has access to the muxing timebase.
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>
This way we can call process_subtitles without causing the decoded
frame counter to get bumped.
Additionally, this now takes into mention all of the decoded
subtitle frames without fix_sub_duration latency/buffering, or filtering
out decoded reset/end subtitles without any rendered rectangles, which
matches the original intent in 4754345027
.
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
This enables us to later call this when generating additional
subtitles for splitting purposes.
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Nadachowski <andrzej.nadachowski@24i.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
Rather than the encoder timebase. Since the times are parsed as
microseconds, this will not reduce precision, except possibly when
chapter times are used and the chapter timebase happens to be better
aligned with the encoder timebase, which is unlikely.
This will allow parsing the keyframe times earlier (before encoder
timebase is known) in future commits.
There are 8 of them and they are typically used together. Allows to pass
just this struct to forced_kf_apply(), which makes it clear that the
rest of the OutputStream is not accessed there.
Replace it with an array of streams in each InputFile. This is a more
accurate reflection of the actual relationship between InputStream and
InputFile.
Analogous to what was previously done to output streams in
7ef7a22251.