* commit 'c3f113d58488df7594a489bdbb993a69ad47063c':
vf_hwdownload: allocate the destination frame for the pool size
Merged-by: Hendrik Leppkes <h.leppkes@gmail.com>
AVFilterLink.frame_count is supposed to count the number of frames
that were passed on the link, but with min_samples, that number is
not always the same for the source and destination filters.
With the addition of a FIFO on the link, the difference will become
more significant.
Split the variable in two: frame_count_in counts the number of
frames that entered the link, frame_count_out counts the number
of frames that were sent to the destination filter.
Also contains the following changes to the library:
- add ff_ prefix to functions
- remove cplusplus defines.
- add FF_ prefix to contants and some structs
- remove true peak calculation feature, since it uses its own resampler, and
af_loudnorm does not need it.
- remove version info and some fprintf(stderr) functions
- convert to use av_malloc
- always use histogram mode for LRA calculation, otherwise LRA data is slowly
consuming memory making af_loudnorm unfit for 24/7 operation. It also uses a
BSD style linked list implementation which is probably not available on all
platforms. So let's just remove the classic mode which not uses histogram.
- add ff_thread_once for calculating static histogram tables
- convert some functions to void which cannot fail
- remove intrinsics and some unused headers
- add support for planar audio
- remove channel / sample rate changer function, in ffmpeg usually we simply
alloc a new context
- convert some static variables to defines
- declare static histogram variables as aligned
- convert some initalizations to mallocz
- add window size parameter to init function and remove window size setter
function
- convert return codes to AVERROR
- fix indentation
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
2-channels convolution using complex fft
improves speed significantly
not sure if it should be enabled by default
so disable it by default
Signed-off-by: Muhammad Faiz <mfcc64@gmail.com>
Takes a frame associated with a hardware context as input and maps it
to something else (another hardware frame or normal memory) for other
processing. If the frame to map was originally in the target format
(but mapped to something else), the original frame is output.
Also supports mapping backwards, where only the output has a hardware
context. The link immediately before will be supplied with mapped
hardware frames which it can write directly into, and this filter
then unmaps them back to the actual hardware frames.
Also adds a new flag to mark filters which are aware of hwframes and
will perform this task themselves, and marks all appropriate filters
with this flag.
This is required to allow software-mapped hardware frames to work,
because we need to have the frames context available for any later
mapping operation in the filter graph.
The output from the filter graph should only propagate further to an
encoder if the hardware format actually matches the visible format
(mapped frames are valid here and have an hw_frames_ctx, but this
should not be given to the encoder as its hardware context).
Thanks to Mathieu Malaterre <malat@debian.org> for reporting the
Que/Queue typo. (https://bugs.debian.org/839542)
Reviewed-by: Lou Logan <lou@lrcd.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com>
This is a similar filter to f_metadata, only it works on side data. Since
adding side data from a user provided arbitrary binary string is unsafe,
because current code assumes that a side data of a certain kind has the proper
size, this filter only implements selection and deletion. Also, no value
matching support is implemented yet, because there is no uniform way to specify
a side data textually.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
The parser for the outdef will accept a negative value for the first
named channel's gain. As negative values effectively only invert the
phase of the signal, and not negate the level, the gains' absolute
values must be used to correctly accumulate the levels.
Signed-off-by: Moritz Barsnick <barsnick@gmx.net>
Reviewed-by: Nicolas George <george@nsup.org>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>