Stop using InputStream.dts for generating missing timestamps for decoded
frames, because it contains pre-decoding timestamps and there may be
arbitrary amount of delay between input packets and output frames (e.g.
dependent on the thread count when frame threading is used). It is also
in AV_TIME_BASE (i.e. microseconds), which may introduce unnecessary
rounding issues.
New code maintains a timebase that is the inverse of the LCM of all the
samplerates seen so far, and thus can accurately represent every audio
sample. This timebase is used to generate missing timestamps after
decoding.
Changes the result of the following FATE tests
* pcm_dvd-16-5.1-96000
* lavf-smjpeg
* adpcm-ima-smjpeg
In all of these the timestamps now better correspond to actual frame
durations.
This should be more useful for users since numerical values for channel
layout can be confusing and unintuitive.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Some of the FATE changes are due to off-by-one different rounding being used
(lrintf vs av_rescale_q).
Some fate changes are due to 1 audio frame less being encoded (the new variant seems
matching what qatar does and according to ffprobe its closer to the requested duration)
the mapchan feature sadly is lost in this commit because it depends on resampling
being done in ffmpeg.c which is now moved completely into the av filter layer
-async is broken after this commit, this will be fixed in subsequent commits
the new filter reconfiguration system is flawed and will drop a frame on each
parameter change which is why the nelly moser checksums need updating.
Conflicts:
ffmpeg.c
tests/ref/fate/smjpeg