According to its description, it is supposed to be the LCM of all the
frame durations. The usability of such a thing is vanishingly small,
especially since we cannot determine it with any amount of reliability.
Therefore get rid of it after the next bump.
Replace it with the average framerate where it makes sense.
FATE results for the wtv and xmv demux tests change. In the wtv case
this is caused by the file being corrupted (or possibly badly cut) and
containing invalid timestamps. This results in lavf estimating the
framerate wrong and making up wrong frame durations.
In the xmv case the file contains pts jumps, so again the estimated
framerate is far from anything sane and lavf again makes up different
frame durations.
In some other tests lavf starts making up frame durations from different
frame.
Right now those muxers use the default timebase in all cases(1/90000).
This patch avoid unnecessary rescaling and makes the printed timestamps
more readable.
Also, extend the printed information to include the timebases and packet
pts/duration and align the columns.
Obviously changes the results of all fate tests which use those two
muxers.
This adds a "fate" make target which runs the full FATE test suite.
Individual tests can be run with "make fate-$testname".
The location of the FATE test samples must be specified with the
--samples=PATH option to configure.
The tests/fate-update.sh script regenerates the references files and
test list from the online FATE database. These are checked in since
generating them requires non-standard tools.
Originally committed as revision 22552 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk