mirror of https://github.com/FFmpeg/FFmpeg.git
You can not select more than 25 topics
Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
551 lines
22 KiB
551 lines
22 KiB
\input texinfo @c -*- texinfo -*- |
|
|
|
@settitle Developer Documentation |
|
@titlepage |
|
@center @titlefont{Developer Documentation} |
|
@end titlepage |
|
|
|
@top |
|
|
|
@contents |
|
|
|
@chapter Developers Guide |
|
|
|
@section API |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item libavcodec is the library containing the codecs (both encoding and |
|
decoding). Look at @file{doc/examples/decoding_encoding.c} to see how to use |
|
it. |
|
|
|
@item libavformat is the library containing the file format handling (mux and |
|
demux code for several formats). Look at @file{ffplay.c} to use it in a |
|
player. See @file{doc/examples/muxing.c} to use it to generate audio or video |
|
streams. |
|
|
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@section Integrating libavcodec or libavformat in your program |
|
|
|
You can integrate all the source code of the libraries to link them |
|
statically to avoid any version problem. All you need is to provide a |
|
'config.mak' and a 'config.h' in the parent directory. See the defines |
|
generated by ./configure to understand what is needed. |
|
|
|
You can use libavcodec or libavformat in your commercial program, but |
|
@emph{any patch you make must be published}. The best way to proceed is |
|
to send your patches to the FFmpeg mailing list. |
|
|
|
@section Contributing |
|
|
|
There are 3 ways by which code gets into ffmpeg. |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item Submitting Patches to the main developer mailing list |
|
see @ref{Submitting patches} for details. |
|
@item Directly committing changes to the main tree. |
|
@item Committing changes to a git clone, for example on github.com or |
|
gitorious.org. And asking us to merge these changes. |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
Whichever way, changes should be reviewed by the maintainer of the code |
|
before they are committed. And they should follow the @ref{Coding Rules}. |
|
The developer making the commit and the author are responsible for their changes |
|
and should try to fix issues their commit causes. |
|
|
|
@anchor{Coding Rules} |
|
@section Coding Rules |
|
|
|
@subsection Code formatting conventions |
|
|
|
There are the following guidelines regarding the indentation in files: |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item |
|
Indent size is 4. |
|
@item |
|
The TAB character is forbidden outside of Makefiles as is any |
|
form of trailing whitespace. Commits containing either will be |
|
rejected by the git repository. |
|
@item |
|
You should try to limit your code lines to 80 characters; however, do so if |
|
and only if this improves readability. |
|
@end itemize |
|
The presentation is one inspired by 'indent -i4 -kr -nut'. |
|
|
|
The main priority in FFmpeg is simplicity and small code size in order to |
|
minimize the bug count. |
|
|
|
@subsection Comments |
|
Use the JavaDoc/Doxygen format (see examples below) so that code documentation |
|
can be generated automatically. All nontrivial functions should have a comment |
|
above them explaining what the function does, even if it is just one sentence. |
|
All structures and their member variables should be documented, too. |
|
|
|
Avoid Qt-style and similar Doxygen syntax with @code{!} in it, i.e. replace |
|
@code{//!} with @code{///} and similar. Also @@ syntax should be employed |
|
for markup commands, i.e. use @code{@@param} and not @code{\param}. |
|
|
|
@example |
|
/** |
|
* @@file |
|
* MPEG codec. |
|
* @@author ... |
|
*/ |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Summary sentence. |
|
* more text ... |
|
* ... |
|
*/ |
|
typedef struct Foobar@{ |
|
int var1; /**< var1 description */ |
|
int var2; ///< var2 description |
|
/** var3 description */ |
|
int var3; |
|
@} Foobar; |
|
|
|
/** |
|
* Summary sentence. |
|
* more text ... |
|
* ... |
|
* @@param my_parameter description of my_parameter |
|
* @@return return value description |
|
*/ |
|
int myfunc(int my_parameter) |
|
... |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@subsection C language features |
|
|
|
FFmpeg is programmed in the ISO C90 language with a few additional |
|
features from ISO C99, namely: |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item |
|
the @samp{inline} keyword; |
|
@item |
|
@samp{//} comments; |
|
@item |
|
designated struct initializers (@samp{struct s x = @{ .i = 17 @};}) |
|
@item |
|
compound literals (@samp{x = (struct s) @{ 17, 23 @};}) |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
These features are supported by all compilers we care about, so we will not |
|
accept patches to remove their use unless they absolutely do not impair |
|
clarity and performance. |
|
|
|
All code must compile with recent versions of GCC and a number of other |
|
currently supported compilers. To ensure compatibility, please do not use |
|
additional C99 features or GCC extensions. Especially watch out for: |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item |
|
mixing statements and declarations; |
|
@item |
|
@samp{long long} (use @samp{int64_t} instead); |
|
@item |
|
@samp{__attribute__} not protected by @samp{#ifdef __GNUC__} or similar; |
|
@item |
|
GCC statement expressions (@samp{(x = (@{ int y = 4; y; @})}). |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@subsection Naming conventions |
|
All names are using underscores (_), not CamelCase. For example, @samp{avfilter_get_video_buffer} is |
|
a valid function name and @samp{AVFilterGetVideo} is not. The exception from this are type names, like |
|
for example structs and enums; they should always be in the CamelCase |
|
|
|
|
|
There are following conventions for naming variables and functions: |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item |
|
For local variables no prefix is required. |
|
@item |
|
For variables and functions declared as @code{static} no prefixes are required. |
|
@item |
|
For variables and functions used internally by the library, @code{ff_} prefix |
|
should be used. |
|
For example, @samp{ff_w64_demuxer}. |
|
@item |
|
For variables and functions used internally across multiple libraries, use |
|
@code{avpriv_}. For example, @samp{avpriv_aac_parse_header}. |
|
@item |
|
For exported names, each library has its own prefixes. Just check the existing |
|
code and name accordingly. |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@subsection Miscellanous conventions |
|
@itemize @bullet |
|
@item |
|
fprintf and printf are forbidden in libavformat and libavcodec, |
|
please use av_log() instead. |
|
@item |
|
Casts should be used only when necessary. Unneeded parentheses |
|
should also be avoided if they don't make the code easier to understand. |
|
@end itemize |
|
|
|
@subsection Editor configuration |
|
In order to configure Vim to follow FFmpeg formatting conventions, paste |
|
the following snippet into your @file{.vimrc}: |
|
@example |
|
" indentation rules for FFmpeg: 4 spaces, no tabs |
|
set expandtab |
|
set shiftwidth=4 |
|
set softtabstop=4 |
|
set cindent |
|
set cinoptions=(0 |
|
" allow tabs in Makefiles |
|
autocmd FileType make set noexpandtab shiftwidth=8 softtabstop=8 |
|
" Trailing whitespace and tabs are forbidden, so highlight them. |
|
highlight ForbiddenWhitespace ctermbg=red guibg=red |
|
match ForbiddenWhitespace /\s\+$\|\t/ |
|
" Do not highlight spaces at the end of line while typing on that line. |
|
autocmd InsertEnter * match ForbiddenWhitespace /\t\|\s\+\%#\@@<!$/ |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
For Emacs, add these roughly equivalent lines to your @file{.emacs.d/init.el}: |
|
@example |
|
(c-add-style "ffmpeg" |
|
'("k&r" |
|
(c-basic-offset . 4) |
|
(indent-tabs-mode . nil) |
|
(show-trailing-whitespace . t) |
|
(c-offsets-alist |
|
(statement-cont . (c-lineup-assignments +))) |
|
) |
|
) |
|
(setq c-default-style "ffmpeg") |
|
@end example |
|
|
|
@section Development Policy |
|
|
|
@enumerate |
|
@item |
|
Contributions should be licensed under the LGPL 2.1, including an |
|
"or any later version" clause, or the MIT license. GPL 2 including |
|
an "or any later version" clause is also acceptable, but LGPL is |
|
preferred. |
|
@item |
|
You must not commit code which breaks FFmpeg! (Meaning unfinished but |
|
enabled code which breaks compilation or compiles but does not work or |
|
breaks the regression tests) |
|
You can commit unfinished stuff (for testing etc), but it must be disabled |
|
(#ifdef etc) by default so it does not interfere with other developers' |
|
work. |
|
@item |
|
You do not have to over-test things. If it works for you, and you think it |
|
should work for others, then commit. If your code has problems |
|
(portability, triggers compiler bugs, unusual environment etc) they will be |
|
reported and eventually fixed. |
|
@item |
|
Do not commit unrelated changes together, split them into self-contained |
|
pieces. Also do not forget that if part B depends on part A, but A does not |
|
depend on B, then A can and should be committed first and separate from B. |
|
Keeping changes well split into self-contained parts makes reviewing and |
|
understanding them on the commit log mailing list easier. This also helps |
|
in case of debugging later on. |
|
Also if you have doubts about splitting or not splitting, do not hesitate to |
|
ask/discuss it on the developer mailing list. |
|
@item |
|
Do not change behavior of the programs (renaming options etc) or public |
|
API or ABI without first discussing it on the ffmpeg-devel mailing list. |
|
Do not remove functionality from the code. Just improve! |
|
|
|
Note: Redundant code can be removed. |
|
@item |
|
Do not commit changes to the build system (Makefiles, configure script) |
|
which change behavior, defaults etc, without asking first. The same |
|
applies to compiler warning fixes, trivial looking fixes and to code |
|
maintained by other developers. We usually have a reason for doing things |
|
the way we do. Send your changes as patches to the ffmpeg-devel mailing |
|
list, and if the code maintainers say OK, you may commit. This does not |
|
apply to files you wrote and/or maintain. |
|
@item |
|
We refuse source indentation and other cosmetic changes if they are mixed |
|
with functional changes, such commits will be rejected and removed. Every |
|
developer has his own indentation style, you should not change it. Of course |
|
if you (re)write something, you can use your own style, even though we would |
|
prefer if the indentation throughout FFmpeg was consistent (Many projects |
|
force a given indentation style - we do not.). If you really need to make |
|
indentation changes (try to avoid this), separate them strictly from real |
|
changes. |
|
|
|
NOTE: If you had to put if()@{ .. @} over a large (> 5 lines) chunk of code, |
|
then either do NOT change the indentation of the inner part within (do not |
|
move it to the right)! or do so in a separate commit |
|
@item |
|
Always fill out the commit log message. Describe in a few lines what you |
|
changed and why. You can refer to mailing list postings if you fix a |
|
particular bug. Comments such as "fixed!" or "Changed it." are unacceptable. |
|
Recommended format: |
|
area changed: Short 1 line description |
|
|
|
details describing what and why and giving references. |
|
@item |
|
Make sure the author of the commit is set correctly. (see git commit --author) |
|
If you apply a patch, send an |
|
answer to ffmpeg-devel (or wherever you got the patch from) saying that |
|
you applied the patch. |
|
@item |
|
When applying patches that have been discussed (at length) on the mailing |
|
list, reference the thread in the log message. |
|
@item |
|
Do NOT commit to code actively maintained by others without permission. |
|
Send a patch to ffmpeg-devel instead. If no one answers within a reasonable |
|
timeframe (12h for build failures and security fixes, 3 days small changes, |
|
1 week for big patches) then commit your patch if you think it is OK. |
|
Also note, the maintainer can simply ask for more time to review! |
|
@item |
|
Subscribe to the ffmpeg-cvslog mailing list. The diffs of all commits |
|
are sent there and reviewed by all the other developers. Bugs and possible |
|
improvements or general questions regarding commits are discussed there. We |
|
expect you to react if problems with your code are uncovered. |
|
@item |
|
Update the documentation if you change behavior or add features. If you are |
|
unsure how best to do this, send a patch to ffmpeg-devel, the documentation |
|
maintainer(s) will review and commit your stuff. |
|
@item |
|
Try to keep important discussions and requests (also) on the public |
|
developer mailing list, so that all developers can benefit from them. |
|
@item |
|
Never write to unallocated memory, never write over the end of arrays, |
|
always check values read from some untrusted source before using them |
|
as array index or other risky things. |
|
@item |
|
Remember to check if you need to bump versions for the specific libav* |
|
parts (libavutil, libavcodec, libavformat) you are changing. You need |
|
to change the version integer. |
|
Incrementing the first component means no backward compatibility to |
|
previous versions (e.g. removal of a function from the public API). |
|
Incrementing the second component means backward compatible change |
|
(e.g. addition of a function to the public API or extension of an |
|
existing data structure). |
|
Incrementing the third component means a noteworthy binary compatible |
|
change (e.g. encoder bug fix that matters for the decoder). The third |
|
component always starts at 100 to distinguish FFmpeg from Libav. |
|
@item |
|
Compiler warnings indicate potential bugs or code with bad style. If a type of |
|
warning always points to correct and clean code, that warning should |
|
be disabled, not the code changed. |
|
Thus the remaining warnings can either be bugs or correct code. |
|
If it is a bug, the bug has to be fixed. If it is not, the code should |
|
be changed to not generate a warning unless that causes a slowdown |
|
or obfuscates the code. |
|
@item |
|
If you add a new file, give it a proper license header. Do not copy and |
|
paste it from a random place, use an existing file as template. |
|
@end enumerate |
|
|
|
We think our rules are not too hard. If you have comments, contact us. |
|
|
|
Note, these rules are mostly borrowed from the MPlayer project. |
|
|
|
@anchor{Submitting patches} |
|
@section Submitting patches |
|
|
|
First, read the @ref{Coding Rules} above if you did not yet, in particular |
|
the rules regarding patch submission. |
|
|
|
When you submit your patch, please use @code{git format-patch} or |
|
@code{git send-email}. We cannot read other diffs :-) |
|
|
|
Also please do not submit a patch which contains several unrelated changes. |
|
Split it into separate, self-contained pieces. This does not mean splitting |
|
file by file. Instead, make the patch as small as possible while still |
|
keeping it as a logical unit that contains an individual change, even |
|
if it spans multiple files. This makes reviewing your patches much easier |
|
for us and greatly increases your chances of getting your patch applied. |
|
|
|
Use the patcheck tool of FFmpeg to check your patch. |
|
The tool is located in the tools directory. |
|
|
|
Run the @ref{Regression tests} before submitting a patch in order to verify |
|
it does not cause unexpected problems. |
|
|
|
Patches should be posted as base64 encoded attachments (or any other |
|
encoding which ensures that the patch will not be trashed during |
|
transmission) to the ffmpeg-devel mailing list, see |
|
@url{http://lists.ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel} |
|
|
|
It also helps quite a bit if you tell us what the patch does (for example |
|
'replaces lrint by lrintf'), and why (for example '*BSD isn't C99 compliant |
|
and has no lrint()') |
|
|
|
Also please if you send several patches, send each patch as a separate mail, |
|
do not attach several unrelated patches to the same mail. |
|
|
|
Your patch will be reviewed on the mailing list. You will likely be asked |
|
to make some changes and are expected to send in an improved version that |
|
incorporates the requests from the review. This process may go through |
|
several iterations. Once your patch is deemed good enough, some developer |
|
will pick it up and commit it to the official FFmpeg tree. |
|
|
|
Give us a few days to react. But if some time passes without reaction, |
|
send a reminder by email. Your patch should eventually be dealt with. |
|
|
|
|
|
@section New codecs or formats checklist |
|
|
|
@enumerate |
|
@item |
|
Did you use av_cold for codec initialization and close functions? |
|
@item |
|
Did you add a long_name under NULL_IF_CONFIG_SMALL to the AVCodec or |
|
AVInputFormat/AVOutputFormat struct? |
|
@item |
|
Did you bump the minor version number (and reset the micro version |
|
number) in @file{libavcodec/version.h} or @file{libavformat/version.h}? |
|
@item |
|
Did you register it in @file{allcodecs.c} or @file{allformats.c}? |
|
@item |
|
Did you add the AVCodecID to @file{avcodec.h}? |
|
When adding new codec IDs, also add an entry to the codec descriptor |
|
list in @file{libavcodec/codec_desc.c}. |
|
@item |
|
If it has a fourCC, did you add it to @file{libavformat/riff.c}, |
|
even if it is only a decoder? |
|
@item |
|
Did you add a rule to compile the appropriate files in the Makefile? |
|
Remember to do this even if you're just adding a format to a file that is |
|
already being compiled by some other rule, like a raw demuxer. |
|
@item |
|
Did you add an entry to the table of supported formats or codecs in |
|
@file{doc/general.texi}? |
|
@item |
|
Did you add an entry in the Changelog? |
|
@item |
|
If it depends on a parser or a library, did you add that dependency in |
|
configure? |
|
@item |
|
Did you @code{git add} the appropriate files before committing? |
|
@item |
|
Did you make sure it compiles standalone, i.e. with |
|
@code{configure --disable-everything --enable-decoder=foo} |
|
(or @code{--enable-demuxer} or whatever your component is)? |
|
@end enumerate |
|
|
|
|
|
@section patch submission checklist |
|
|
|
@enumerate |
|
@item |
|
Does @code{make fate} pass with the patch applied? |
|
@item |
|
Was the patch generated with git format-patch or send-email? |
|
@item |
|
Did you sign off your patch? (git commit -s) |
|
See @url{http://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git;a=blob_plain;f=Documentation/SubmittingPatches} for the meaning |
|
of sign off. |
|
@item |
|
Did you provide a clear git commit log message? |
|
@item |
|
Is the patch against latest FFmpeg git master branch? |
|
@item |
|
Are you subscribed to ffmpeg-devel? |
|
(the list is subscribers only due to spam) |
|
@item |
|
Have you checked that the changes are minimal, so that the same cannot be |
|
achieved with a smaller patch and/or simpler final code? |
|
@item |
|
If the change is to speed critical code, did you benchmark it? |
|
@item |
|
If you did any benchmarks, did you provide them in the mail? |
|
@item |
|
Have you checked that the patch does not introduce buffer overflows or |
|
other security issues? |
|
@item |
|
Did you test your decoder or demuxer against damaged data? If no, see |
|
tools/trasher and the noise bitstream filter. Your decoder or demuxer |
|
should not crash or end in a (near) infinite loop when fed damaged data. |
|
@item |
|
Does the patch not mix functional and cosmetic changes? |
|
@item |
|
Did you add tabs or trailing whitespace to the code? Both are forbidden. |
|
@item |
|
Is the patch attached to the email you send? |
|
@item |
|
Is the mime type of the patch correct? It should be text/x-diff or |
|
text/x-patch or at least text/plain and not application/octet-stream. |
|
@item |
|
If the patch fixes a bug, did you provide a verbose analysis of the bug? |
|
@item |
|
If the patch fixes a bug, did you provide enough information, including |
|
a sample, so the bug can be reproduced and the fix can be verified? |
|
Note please do not attach samples >100k to mails but rather provide a |
|
URL, you can upload to ftp://upload.ffmpeg.org |
|
@item |
|
Did you provide a verbose summary about what the patch does change? |
|
@item |
|
Did you provide a verbose explanation why it changes things like it does? |
|
@item |
|
Did you provide a verbose summary of the user visible advantages and |
|
disadvantages if the patch is applied? |
|
@item |
|
Did you provide an example so we can verify the new feature added by the |
|
patch easily? |
|
@item |
|
If you added a new file, did you insert a license header? It should be |
|
taken from FFmpeg, not randomly copied and pasted from somewhere else. |
|
@item |
|
You should maintain alphabetical order in alphabetically ordered lists as |
|
long as doing so does not break API/ABI compatibility. |
|
@item |
|
Lines with similar content should be aligned vertically when doing so |
|
improves readability. |
|
@item |
|
Consider to add a regression test for your code. |
|
@item |
|
If you added YASM code please check that things still work with --disable-yasm |
|
@item |
|
Make sure you check the return values of function and return appropriate |
|
error codes. Especially memory allocation functions like @code{av_malloc()} |
|
are notoriously left unchecked, which is a serious problem. |
|
@end enumerate |
|
|
|
@section Patch review process |
|
|
|
All patches posted to ffmpeg-devel will be reviewed, unless they contain a |
|
clear note that the patch is not for the git master branch. |
|
Reviews and comments will be posted as replies to the patch on the |
|
mailing list. The patch submitter then has to take care of every comment, |
|
that can be by resubmitting a changed patch or by discussion. Resubmitted |
|
patches will themselves be reviewed like any other patch. If at some point |
|
a patch passes review with no comments then it is approved, that can for |
|
simple and small patches happen immediately while large patches will generally |
|
have to be changed and reviewed many times before they are approved. |
|
After a patch is approved it will be committed to the repository. |
|
|
|
We will review all submitted patches, but sometimes we are quite busy so |
|
especially for large patches this can take several weeks. |
|
|
|
If you feel that the review process is too slow and you are willing to try to |
|
take over maintainership of the area of code you change then just clone |
|
git master and maintain the area of code there. We will merge each area from |
|
where its best maintained. |
|
|
|
When resubmitting patches, please do not make any significant changes |
|
not related to the comments received during review. Such patches will |
|
be rejected. Instead, submit significant changes or new features as |
|
separate patches. |
|
|
|
@anchor{Regression tests} |
|
@section Regression tests |
|
|
|
Before submitting a patch (or committing to the repository), you should at least |
|
test that you did not break anything. |
|
|
|
Running 'make fate' accomplishes this, please see @url{fate.html} for details. |
|
|
|
[Of course, some patches may change the results of the regression tests. In |
|
this case, the reference results of the regression tests shall be modified |
|
accordingly]. |
|
|
|
@subsection Adding files to the fate-suite dataset |
|
|
|
When there is no muxer or encoder available to generate test media for a |
|
specific test then the media has to be inlcuded in the fate-suite. |
|
First please make sure that the sample file is as small as possible to test the |
|
respective decoder or demuxer sufficiently. Large files increase network |
|
bandwidth and disk space requirements. |
|
Once you have a working fate test and fate sample, provide in the commit |
|
message or introductionary message for the patch series that you post to |
|
the ffmpeg-devel mailing list, a direct link to download the sample media. |
|
|
|
|
|
@bye
|
|
|