It retrieves the muxer's internal timestamp with under-defined
semantics. Continuing to use this value would also require
synchronization once the muxer is moved to a separate thread.
Replace the value with last_mux_dts.
This field means different things when the video is encoded (number of
frames emitted to the encoding sync queue/encoder by the video sync
code) or copied (number of packets sent to the muxer sync queue).
Print the value of packets_written instead, which means the same thing
in both cases. It is also more accurate, since packets may be dropped by
the sync queue or bitstream filters.
Same issues apply to it as to -shortest.
Changes the results of the following tests:
- matroska-flac-extradata-update
The test reencodes two input FLAC streams into three output FLAC
streams. The last output stream is limited to 8 frames. The current
code results in the first two output streams having 12 frames, after
this commit all three streams have 8 frames and are the same length.
This new result is better, since it is predictable.
- mkv-1242
The test streamcopies one video and one audio stream, video is limited
to 11 frames. The new result shortens the audio stream so that it is
not longer than the video.
The -shortest option (which finishes the output file at the time the
shortest stream ends) is currently implemented by faking the -t option
when an output stream ends. This approach is fragile, since it depends
on the frames/packets being processed in a specific order. E.g. there
are currently some situations in which the output file length will
depend unpredictably on unrelated factors like encoder delay. More
importantly, the present work aiming at splitting various ffmpeg
components into different threads will make this approach completely
unworkable, since the frames/packets will arrive in effectively random
order.
This commit introduces a "sync queue", which is essentially a collection
of FIFOs, one per stream. Frames/packets are submitted to these FIFOs
and are then released for further processing (encoding or muxing) when
it is ensured that the frame in question will not cause its stream to
get ahead of the other streams (the logic is similar to libavformat's
interleaving queue).
These sync queues are then used for encoding and/or muxing when the
-shortest option is specified.
A new option – -shortest_buf_duration – controls the maximum number of
queued packets, to avoid runaway memory usage.
This commit changes the results of the following tests:
- copy-shortest[12]: the last audio frame is now gone. This is
correct, since it actually outlasts the last video frame.
- shortest-sub: the video packets following the last subtitle packet are
now gone. This is also correct.
The following commits will add a new buffering stage after bitstream
filters, which should not be taken into account for choosing next
output.
OutputStream.last_mux_dts is also used by the muxing code to make up
missing DTS values - that field is now moved to the muxer-private
MuxStream object.
The current placement of this free is historical - it used to be
followed by avcodec_close(), since removed.
The proper place for freeing the stats is currently right before the
encoder context itself is freed.
It is currently called from two places:
- output_packet() in ffmpeg.c, which submits the newly available output
packet to the muxer
- from of_check_init() in ffmpeg_mux.c after the header has been
written, to flush the muxing queue
Some packets will thus be processed by this function twice, so it
requires an extra parameter to indicate the place it is called from and
avoid modifying some state twice.
This is fragile and hard to follow, so split this function into two.
Also rename of_write_packet() to of_submit_packet() to better reflect
its new purpose.
The muxing queue currently lives in OutputStream, which is a very large
struct storing the state for both encoding and muxing. The muxing queue
is only used by the code in ffmpeg_mux, so it makes sense to restrict it
to that file.
This makes the first step towards reducing the scope of OutputStream.
Figure out earlier whether the output stream/file should be bitexact and
store this information in a flag in OutputFile/OutputStream.
Stop accessing the muxer in set_encoder_id(), which will become
forbidden in future commits.
The current code postpones closing the files until after printing the
final report, which accesses the output file size. Deal with this by
storing the final file size before closing the file.
Move the file size checking code to ffmpeg_mux. Use the recently
introduced of_filesize(), making this code consistent with the size
shown by print_report().
Move header_written into it, which is not (and should not be) used by
any code outside of ffmpeg_mux.
In the future this context will contain more muxer-private state that
should not be visible to other code.
This is a per-file input option that adjusts an input's timestamps
with reference to another input, so that emitted packet timestamps
account for the difference between the start times of the two inputs.
Typical use case is to sync two or more live inputs such as from capture
devices. Both the target and reference input source timestamps should be
based on the same clock source.
If either input lacks starting timestamps, then no sync adjustment is made.
These packets need not be writable (and are not modified by us),
so it is best to access them via const uint8_t*.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
regression since 13350e81fd
Fix looking for .ffmpeg subfolder in FFMPEG_DATADIR and inversely not in HOME.
Fix search order (documentation).
Signed-off-by: Timo Rothenpieler <timo@rothenpieler.org>
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 are always
using 64 bit values for them.
A live stream can easily run for more than a year and the framedup logic breaks
on an overflow.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
GL and Metal cache the state at time of texture creation. GLES2 and
Direct3D 11 use the state at time of the render copy call.
So the only way we can get the correct behavior consistently is by
making sure the state is set for both the upload *and* the draw call.
This probably isn't our bug to fix (upstream should make itself behave
consistently and also document its functions), but as it stands,
`ffplay` is misrendering BT.709 as BT.601 on my stock Linux system, and
that leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
This enables printing to a resource specified with -o OUTPUT.
In case the output is not specified, prints to stdout as usual.
Address issue: http://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/8024
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Option was added in commit 39aafa5ee9 but was never documented.
Also does not seem there are current use cases for it,
tests for which it was introduced are still working therefore we drop
it altogether.
Indirectly fix trac issue: http://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/1698
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Fix JSON output in case a frame or packet section contains a nested section.
Fix trac issue http://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/8680.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
This is a more appropriate place for this code, since the values we read
from AV_PKT_DATA_QUALITY_STATS side data are primarily written into
video stats. This ensures that the values written into stats actually
apply to the right packet.
Rename the function to update_video_stats() to better reflect its new
purpose.