Restore alphabetical order in lists, break overly long lines, do some
prettyprinting, add some explanatory section comments, group parts
together that belong together logically.
Instead of a linked list constructed at av_register_all(), store them
in a constant array of pointers.
Since no registration is necessary now, this removes some global state
from lavf. This will also allow the urlprotocol layer caller to limit
the available protocols in a simple and flexible way in the following
commits.
Contrary to the normal fate tests that run via avconv, this tests
nontrivial call sequences that are only doable via the API
(mainly for different corner cases when using the muxer for
segmenting).
The test muxes fake packet data (with extradata that looks
enough like proper data to make the file be viewable with e.g.
boxdumper) and checks the hash of the produced files. The test also
verifies that fragments produced via different call sequences remain
identical (to avoid e.g. updating the output hashes and suddenly
having fragments that used to be identical suddenly diverging), for
fragments written with frag_discont and/or delay_moov.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Move the OpenSSL and GnuTLS implementations to their own files. Other
than the connection code (including options) and some boilerplate, no
code is actually shared.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Instead check for all mov code-points when demuxing avi
and print a warning if a video codec is found like this.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
They share a great deal of common structure; only a few minor
bits in the headers differ.
This also fixes an off-by-one in sending of the last fragment
of large HEVC nals (where it previously sent len+2 bytes, even
if it should have been len+RTP_HEVC_HEADERS_SIZE aka len+3).
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Nothing uses it, and it provides no public API.
Archeological finds:
Commit 101036adb9 added the API.
Commit a8dd8dc6e9 made mpegts.c use it.
Commit af8aae3fa3 disabled it by default in mpegts.c.
Commit ae2bb52cd2 removed all uses of this from mpegts.c.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Since this structurally is quite different from normal RTP
(multiple streams are muxed into one single mpegts stream,
which is packetized into one single RTP session), it is kept
as a separate muxer.
Since this structurally also behaves differently than normal
RTP, all of the other muxers that do chained RTP muxing
(rtsp, sap, mp4) would need to be updated similarly to handle
this - in particular, creating one single rtp_mpegts muxer
for the whole presentation instead of one rtp muxer per stream.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
The packetizer only supports splitting at GOB headers - if
such aren't available frequently enough, it splits at any
random byte offset (not at a macroblock boundary either, which
would be allowed by the spec) and sends a payload header pretend
that it starts with a GOB header.
As long as a receiver doesn't try to handle such cases cleverly
but just drops broken frames, this shouldn't matter too much
in practice.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
The RTP muxer enables the actual codepaths within sdp.c,
which depend on hevc.o since e5cfc8fd.
This fixes builds with --disable-everything --enable-muxer=rtp.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This is mostly to serve as a reference example on how to segment
the output from the mp4 muxer, capable of writing the segment
list in four different ways:
- SegmentTemplate with SegmentTimeline
- SegmentTemplate with implicit segments
- SegmentList with individual files
- SegmentList with one single file per track, and byte ranges
The muxer is able to serve live content (with optional windowing)
or create a static segmented MPD.
In advanced cases, users will probably want to do the segmenting
in their own application code.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
It has not been properly maintained for years and there is little hope
of that changing in the future.
It appears simpler to write a new replacement from scratch than
unbreaking it.