This was suggested in the discussion about these functions
With this change the functions are available internally but are not
part of the public API
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The old one is the result of the reverse engineering and guesswork.
The new one has been written following the now-available specification.
This work is part of Outreach Program for Women Summer 2014 activities
for the Libav project.
The fate references had to be changed because the old demuxer truncates
the last frame in some cases, the new one handles it properly.
The seek-test reference is changed because seeking works differently
in the new demuxer. When seeking, the packet is not read from the stream
directly, but it is rather constructed by the demuxer. That is why
position is -1 now in the reference.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
The code is simply broken, the read packets are not aligned to
the mp3 frames, the file end or the id3 tag thus this simply
cannot reliably find the ID3v1 tag to remove it
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This patch adds support for WebM Live Muxing by adding a new WebM
Chunk muxer. It writes out live WebM Chunks which can be used for
playback using Live DASH Clients.
Please see muxers.texi for sample usage.
Signed-off-by: Vignesh Venkatasubramanian <vigneshv@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The current behavior may produce a different sequence of packets
after seeking, compared to demuxing linearly from the beginning.
This is because the MOV demuxer seeks in each stream individually,
based on timestamp, which may set each stream at a slightly different
position than if the file would have been read sequentially.
This makes implementing certain operations, such as segmenting,
quite hard, and slower than need be.
Therefore, add an option which retains the same packet sequence
after seeking, as when a file is demuxed linearly.
The current behavior may produce a different sequence of packets
after seeking, compared to demuxing linearly from the beginning.
This is because the MOV demuxer seeks in each stream individually,
based on timestamp, which may set each stream at a slightly different
position than if the file would have been read sequentially.
This makes implementing certain operations, such as segmenting,
quite hard, and slower than need be.
Therefore, add an option which retains the same packet sequence
after seeking, as when a file is demuxed linearly.
Similarly to what has been done for MOV, display XMP metadata only when
users explicitly require it.
The Extensible Metadata Platform tag can contain various kind of data
which are not strictly related to the video file, such as history of
edits and saves from the project file.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
This delays writing the moov until the first fragment is written,
or can be flushed by the caller explicitly when wanted. If the first
sample in all streams is available at this point, we can write
a proper editlist at this point, allowing streams to start at
something else than dts=0. For AC3 and DNXHD, a packet is
needed in order to write the moov header properly.
This isn't added to the normal behaviour for empty_moov, since
the behaviour that ftyp+moov is written during avformat_write_header
would be changed. Callers that split the output stream into header+segments
(either by flushing manually, with the custom_frag flag set, or by
just differentiating between data written during avformat_write_header
and the rest) will need to be adjusted to take this option into use.
For handling streams that start at something else than dts=0, an
alternative would be to use different kinds of heuristics for
guessing the start dts (using AVCodecContext delay or has_b_frames
together with the frame rate), but this is not reliable and doesn't
necessarily work well with stream copy, and wouldn't work for getting
the right initialization data for AC3 or DNXHD either.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>