Analogous to -enc_stats*, but happens right before muxing. Useful
because bitstream filters and the sync queue can modify packets after
encoding and before muxing. Also has access to the muxing timebase.
Since at least 4.4.3, -ab/-b:a help text was in the video section
of ffmpeg -h, but these are audio options.
Signed-off-by: Marth64 <marth64@proxyid.net>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Splits the currently handled subtitle at random access point
packets that can be configured to follow a specific output stream.
Currently only subtitle streams which are directly mapped into the
same output in which the heartbeat stream resides are affected.
This way the subtitle - which is known to be shown at this time
can be split and passed to muxer before its full duration is
yet known. This is also a drawback, as this essentially outputs
multiple subtitles from a single input subtitle that continues
over multiple random access points. Thus this feature should not
be utilized in cases where subtitle output latency does not matter.
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Nadachowski <andrzej.nadachowski@24i.com>
Co-authored-by: Bernard Boulay <bernard.boulay@24i.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
This way we can call process_subtitles without causing the decoded
frame counter to get bumped.
Additionally, this now takes into mention all of the decoded
subtitle frames without fix_sub_duration latency/buffering, or filtering
out decoded reset/end subtitles without any rendered rectangles, which
matches the original intent in 4754345027
.
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
This enables us to later call this when generating additional
subtitles for splitting purposes.
Co-authored-by: Andrzej Nadachowski <andrzej.nadachowski@24i.com>
Signed-off-by: Jan Ekström <jan.ekstrom@24i.com>
Current code may, depending on the muxer, decide to use VSYNC_VFR tagged
with the specified framerate, without actually performing framerate
conversion. This is clearly wrong and against the documentation, which
states unambiguously that -r should produce CFR output for video
encoding.
FATE test changes:
* nuv-rtjpeg: replace -r with '-enc_time_base -1', which keeps the
original timebase. Output frames are now produced with proper
durations.
* filter-mpdecimate: just drop the -r option, it is unnecessary
* filter-fps-r: remove, this test makes no sense and actually
produces broken VFR output (with incorrect frame durations).
Instead of manually assembling the string, use av_dict_get_string
which handles things like proper escaping too (even though it is
not yet needed here).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Rather than the encoder timebase. Since the times are parsed as
microseconds, this will not reduce precision, except possibly when
chapter times are used and the chapter timebase happens to be better
aligned with the encoder timebase, which is unlikely.
This will allow parsing the keyframe times earlier (before encoder
timebase is known) in future commits.
There are 8 of them and they are typically used together. Allows to pass
just this struct to forced_kf_apply(), which makes it clear that the
rest of the OutputStream is not accessed there.
Do it in set_dispositions() rather than during stream creation.
Since at this point all other stream information is known, this allows
setting disposition based on metadata, which implements #10015. This
also avoids an extra allocated string in OutputStream that was unused
after of_open().
Replace it with an array of streams in each InputFile. This is a more
accurate reflection of the actual relationship between InputStream and
InputFile.
Analogous to what was previously done to output streams in
7ef7a22251.