Fix "ost->st->avg_frame_rate = ost->frame_rate" in streamcopy_init()
being reset to input's frame rate a few lines below.
Note that in current code, there are some discrepancies amongst the
muxers. For example, avienc relies on time_base, so it is not affected
by this patch, whereas mxfenc and matroskaenc do use avg_frame_rate,
so this patch fixes -r being honored.
In the updated fate test, the input is (wrongly) probed as 50fps. With
this patch, the correct value (25fps) is successfully forced with -r.
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Gaullier <nicolas.gaullier@cji.paris>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
The time_base was a bad guess.
Currently, fate-time_base test data assumed that overriding the input
time_base would affect the frame_rate, but this behaviour is not
documented, so just fix the fate data now that this is fixed.
Fix regression since 10185e2d4c1e9839bc58a1d6a63c861677b13fd0:
previously, when streamcopying, the time_base was guessed from the
frame_rate considering it is often constant, so guessing the frame_rate
back from the time_base was often not a problem.
To reproduce:
ffmpeg -i fate-suite/mpeg2/dvd_still_frame.vob -an -c copy out.mxf
Signed-off-by: Nicolas Gaullier <nicolas.gaullier@cji.paris>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
The md5 protocol has no seek support, but some tests use seeks. This changes
the fate tests to actually create the output files and calculate the md5 on the
written files, which also makes the tests independent of the size of the output
buffers and output buffering in general.
A new md5pipe fate test method is also introduced to keep the old functionality
for tests where using a non-seekable output was intentional, and matroska md5
tests are changed to use that.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>