Writing the duration SimpleTag is special: It's size is
reserved in advance via an EBML Void element (if seekable)
and this reserved space is overwritten when writing the trailer;
it does not use put_ebml_string().
The string to write is created via snprintf on a buffer
of size 20; this buffer is then written via put_ebml_binary()
with a size of 20.
EBML strings need not be zero-terminated; if not, they
are implicitly terminated by the element's length field.
snprintf() always zero-terminates the buffer, i.e.
the last byte can be discarded when using an EBML string.
This patch does this.
The FATE changes are as expected: One byte saved for every
track; the only exception is the matroska-qt-mode test:
An additional byte is saved because an additional byte
could be saved from the enclosing Tags length field.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This is possible by using a dynamic buffer to write them;
said dynamic buffer is (re)used and reset as appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Up until now, the Matroska muxer did not use the dispositions it is
given as-is; instead it by default overrode the disposition of the first
track of a kind (audio, video, subtitles) if no track of this kind has
the default disposition set. And up until recently, it also enforced
by default that no more than one track of each kind be marked as
default.
The rationale for the former is that there are lots of containers which
lack the concept of default streams, so that it is not uncommon for no
stream to be marked as default at all; the rationale for the latter was
that up until recently, it was dubious whether the Matroska specification
allowed more than one default stream for track type (e.g. mkvmerge
disallowed it). It was this point which led to the implementation of
the above mentioned behaviour inspired by mkvmerge.
Yet the Matroska specifications have changed and now explicitly allow
to set more than one track of each type as default, so that the main
reason of not using the dispositions as-is was rendered moot. Therefore
this commit changes the default to pass the disposition through.
The matroska-mpegts-remux FATE-test has been updated to still use the
old "infer" mode so that it is still covered by FATE; the
matroska-zero-length-block test has also been updated to cover
the infer_no_subs mode. The references for lots of other FATE tests
needed to be updated because of a newly added FlagDefault element with
value zero (whereas a FlagDefault with value 1 needn't be coded at all,
as it coincided with the default value of said element).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Factor out the code into a separate muxing-specific function.
Stop accessing the deprecated AVStream-embedded codec context, use the
average framerate (if specified) instead.
This is utilized by various media ingests to figure out the bit
rate of the content you are pushing towards it, so write it for
video, audio and subtitle tracks in case at least one nonzero value
is available. It is only mentioned for timed metadata sample
descriptions in QTFF, so limit it only to ISOBMFF (MODE_MP4) mode.
Updates the FATE tests which have their results changed due to the
20 extra bytes being written per track.
This AV1 decoder is currently only used for hardware accelerated decoding.
It can be extended into a native decoder in the future, so set its name to
"av1" and temporarily give it the lowest priority in the codec list.
Signed-off-by: Fei Wang <fei.w.wang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This is a requirement of the AV1-ISOBMFF spec. Section 2.1.
General Requirements & Brands states:
* It SHALL have the av01 brand among the compatible brands array of the FileTypeBox
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
The Matroska muxer writes the Chapters early when chapters were already
available when writing the header; in this case any tags pertaining to
these chapters get written, too.
Yet if no chapters had been supplied before writing the header, Chapters
can also be written when writing the trailer if any are supplied. Tags
belonging to these chapters were up until now completely ignored.
This commit changes this: Writing the tags belonging to chapters has
been moved to mkv_write_chapters(). If mkv_write_tags() has not been
called yet (i.e. when chapters are written when writing the header),
the AVIOContext for writing the ordinary Tags element is used, but not
output, as this is left to mkv_write_tags() in order to only write one
Tags element. Yet if mkv_write_tags() has already been called,
mkv_write_chapters() will output a Tags element of its own which only
contains the tags for chapters.
When chapters are available initially, the corresponding tags will now
be the first tags in the Tags element; but the ordering of tags in Tags
is irrelevant anyway.
This commit also makes chapter_id_offset local to mkv_write_chapters()
as it is used only there and not reused at all.
Potentially writing a second Tags element means that the maximum number
of SeekHead entries had to be incremented. All the changes to FATE
result from the ensuing increase in the amount of space reserved for the
SeekHead (21 bytes more).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Several EBML Master elements for which a good upper bound of the final
length was available were nevertheless written without giving an
upper bound of the final length to start_ebml_master(), so that their
length fields were eight bytes long. This has been changed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Using random values for TrackUID and FileUID (as happens when the
AVFMT_FLAG_BITEXACT flag is not set) has the obvious downside of making
the output indeterministic. This commit mitigates this by writing the
potentially random values with a fixed size of eight byte, even if their
actual values would fit into less than eight bytes. This ensures that
even in non-bitexact mode, the differences between two files generated
with the same settings are restricted to a few bytes in the header.
(Namely the SegmentUID, the TrackUIDs (in Tracks as well as when
referencing them via TagTrackUID), the FileUIDs (in Attachments as
well as in TagAttachmentUID) as well as the CRC-32 checksums of the
Info, Tracks, Attachments and Tags level-1-elements.) Without this
patch, there might be an offset/a size difference between two such
files.
The FATE-tests had to be updated because the fixed-sized UIDs are also
used in bitexact mode.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Up until e7ddafd5, the Matroska muxer wrote two SeekHeads: One at the
beginning referencing the main level 1 elements (i.e. not the Clusters)
and one at the end, referencing the Clusters. This second SeekHead was
useless and has therefore been removed. Yet the SeekHead-related
functions and structures are still geared towards this usecase: They
are built around an allocated array of variable size that gets
reallocated every time an element is added to it although the maximum
number of Seek entries is a small compile-time constant, so that one should
rather include the array in the SeekHead structure itself; and said
structure should be contained in the MatroskaMuxContext instead of being
allocated separately.
The earlier code reserved space for a SeekHead with 10 entries, although
we currently write at most 6. Reducing said number implied that every
Matroska/Webm file will be 84 bytes smaller and required to adapt
several FATE tests; furthermore, the reserved amount overestimated the
amount needed for for the SeekHead's length field and how many bytes
need to be reserved to write a EBML Void element, bringing the total
reduction to 89 bytes.
This also fixes a potential segfault: If !mkv->is_live and if the
AVIOContext is initially unseekable when writing the header, the
SeekHead is already written when writing the header and this used to
free the SeekHead-related structures that have been allocated. But if
the AVIOContext happens to be seekable when writing the trailer, it will
be attempted to write the SeekHead again which will lead to segfaults
because the corresponding structures have already been freed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
da9cc22d5b allowed the MOV muxer to relay a custom stream handler name,
whether populated from the input stream or user-set. However, the entry
key didn't match the key set by the MOV demuxer, so it wasn't
effective. Fixed.
Due to the change, four FATE refs have to be updated. Verified that the
target payload of the tests hasn't changed in terms of CRC.
The specs says that the the first color component in the color array is
not alpha, but simply 0.
Fixes 0 alpha of fate-suite/cvid/catfight-cvid-pal8-partial.mov
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
* commit 'b263f8ffe7599d9cd27ec477a12700da8eb2790d':
lavf: add AVFormatContext.max_ts_probe
Conflicts:
doc/APIchanges
libavformat/avformat.h
libavformat/utils.c
libavformat/version.h
lavf-fate/mp3 changes as the estimated input bitrate changes and that is
copied to the output
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Since we don't write lavf's string when bitexact is requested, this will
prevent the tag from being copied from the source stream.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Adding an arbitrary amount of padding bytes at the end of the
ID3 metadata fixes cover art display for some software (iTunes,
Traktor, Serato, Torq).
For reference (ID3 metadata):
[ Apic frames ] -> cover doesn't show up
[ Apic frames, Padding ] -> ok
[ Apic frames, ID3 frames ] -> ok
[ ID3 frames, Apic frames ] -> cover doesn't show up
[ ID3 frames, Apic frames, Padding ] -> ok
When parsing the Xing/Info tag, don't set the bit rate if it's an Info tag.
When parsing the stream, don't override the bit rate if it's already set,
otherwise calculate the mean bit rate from parsed frames. This way, the bit
rate will be set correctly both for CBR and VBR streams.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Kojevnikov <alexander@kojevnikov.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
For the FATE test sample used, this only avoids a warning
message.
However for other samples like al05_44.mp4 the converted
file can be played only after this fix.
Signed-off-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>
This will only work for DSEs that are first in a packet, but
that is enough to fix handling of the reference files in
fate-suite/aac (though most of them still have other issues).
Signed-off-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>
The previous condition of 0 page size was wrong,
that would disable the mechanism for all frames at
a start of a page, thus some keyframes still would not
get their own granule.
The real problem is that header packets must not be flushed,
but they have (and must have) 0 granule and thus would
be detected as keyframes.
Add a separate parameter to mark header packets.
Signed-off-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>