Use the appropriate metadata filter for each codec - in the absence of any
options to modify the stream, the output bitstream should be identical to
the input (though the output file may differ in padding).
All tests use conformance bitstreams, the MPEG-2 streams are newly added
from the conformance test streams
<http://standards.iso.org/ittf/PubliclyAvailableStandards/ISO_IEC_13818-4_2004_Conformance_Testing/Video/>
Since there is no information about the source format, "unspecified"
is the correct value to write here.
All tests using the MPEG-2 encoder are updated, as this changes the
header on all outputs.
The constants used in the decoder used floating point precision,
and this caused different values to be generated on different
architectures. Additionally on big endian machines, the fate test
would output bytes in native order, which is different from the one
hardcoded in the test.
So, eradicate floating point numbers and use fixed point (32.32)
arithmetics everywhere, replacing constants with precomputed integer
values, and force the pixel format output to be the same in the fate
test.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
This matrix needs to be applied after all others have (currently only
display matrix from trak), but cannot be handled in movie box, since
streams are not allocated yet. So store it in main context, and apply
it when appropriate, that is after parsing the tkhd one.
Fate tests are updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
This also fixes a minor bug introduced in the codecpar conversion, where
the termination condition for extracting the extradata does not match
the actual extradata setting code. As a result, the packet durations
made up by lavf go back to their values before the codecpar conversion.
That is of little consequence since that code should eventually be
dropped completely.