Choose what types of reference frames will be used based on what types
are available, and make the intra-only mode explicit (GOP size one,
which must be used for MJPEG).
Query which modes are supported and select between VBR and CBR based
on that - this removes all of the codec-specific rate control mode
selection code.
Previously there was one fixed choice for each codec (e.g. H.265 -> Main
profile), and using anything else then required an explicit option from
the user. This changes to selecting the profile based on the input format
and the set of profiles actually supported by the driver (e.g. P010 input
will choose Main 10 profile for H.265 if the driver supports it).
The entrypoint and render target format are also chosen dynamically in the
same way, removing those explicit selections from the per-codec code.
This removes the arbitrary limit on the allowed number of slices and
parameter buffers.
From ffmpeg commit e4a6eb70f4.
Signed-off-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net>
Change the slice/parameter buffers to be allocated dynamically.
Signed-off-by: Wang, Yi A <yi.a.wang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhao <jun.zhao@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net>
Use AVCodecContext.compression_level rather than a private option,
replacing the H.264-specific quality option (which stays only for
compatibility).
This now works with the H.265 encoder in the i965 driver, as well as
the existing cases with the H.264 encoder.
(cherry picked from commit 19388a7200)
Use AVCodecContext.compression_level rather than a private option,
replacing the H.264-specific quality option (which stays only for
compatibility).
This now works with the H.265 encoder in the i965 driver, as well as
the existing cases with the H.264 encoder.
Only do this when building for a recent VAAPI version - initial
driver implementations were confused about the interpretation of the
framerate field, but hopefully this will be consistent everywhere
once 0.40.0 is released.
(cherry picked from commit ff35aa8ca4)
This change makes the configured GOP size be respected exactly -
previously the value could be exceeded slightly due to flaws in the
frame type selection logic.
(cherry picked from commit 37fab0661a)
Only do this when building for a recent VAAPI version - initial
driver implementations were confused about the interpretation of the
framerate field, but hopefully this will be consistent everywhere
once 0.40.0 is released.
This change makes the configured GOP size be respected exactly -
previously the value could be exceeded slightly due to flaws in the
frame type selection logic.
This allows better checking of capabilities and will make it easier
to add more functionality later.
It also commonises some duplicated code around rate control setup
and adds more comments explaining the internals.
(cherry picked from commit 80a5d05108)
This allows better checking of capabilities and will make it easier
to add more functionality later.
It also commonises some duplicated code around rate control setup
and adds more comments explaining the internals.
Previously we would allocate a new one for every frame. This instead
maintains an AVBufferPool of them to use as-needed.
Also makes the maximum size of an output buffer adapt to the frame
size - the fixed upper bound was a bit too easy to hit when encoding
large pictures at high quality.