Metadata streams have priv_data set to NULL.
Reviewed-by: Josh de Kock <josh@itanimul.li>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com>
The nvidia 375.xx driver introduces support for P016 output surfaces,
for 10bit and 12bit HEVC content (it's also the first driver to support
hardware decoding of 12bit content).
The cuvid api, as far as I can tell, only declares one output format
that they appear to refer to as P016 in the driver strings. Of course,
10bit content in P016 is identical to P010, and it is useful for
compatibility purposes to declare the format to be P010 to work with
other components that only know how to consume P010 (and to avoid
triggering swscale conversions that are lossy when they shouldn't be).
For simplicity, this change does not maintain the previous ability
to output dithered NV12 for 10/12 bit input video - the user will need
to update their driver to decode such videos.
P016 is the 16-bit variant of NV12 (planar luma, packed chroma), using
two bytes per component.
It may, and in fact is most likely to, be used in situations where
there are less than 16 bits of data. It is the responsibility of
the writer to zero out any unused LSBs.
Currently, it forces IDR frames for both true and false.
Not entirely sure what the original idea behind the tri-state bool
option is.
Reviewed-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
User selectable surfaces are not working correctly, if you set number of
surfaces on cmdline, it will always use minimum 32 or 48 depends on
selected resolution, but in nvenc it is not necessary to use so many
surfaces.
So from now you can define as low as 1 surface and nvenc will still
work, it will ofcourse lower GPU memory usage by 95% and async_delay to zero
That was the easy part, now littlebit more...
Next part of this patch is to always prefer rc_lookahead to be more
important for number of surfaces, than user defined surfaces value.
Maximum rc_lookahead from nvidia documentation is 32, but could increase
in future generations so there is no limit for this yet. Value
async_depth is still accepted and prefered over rc_lookahead.
There were also bug when you request more than rc_lookahead > 31, it
will always set maximum 31, because surface numbers recalculation was
after setting lookahead, which is now fixed.
Results:
If you set -rc_lookahead 32 and -bf 3 it will now use only 40 surfaces
and lower GPU memory usage by 20%, also it will now increase PSNR by 0.012dB
Two more comments:
1. from my internal test, i don't understand addition of 4 more surfaces
when lookahead is calculated, i didn't used this and everything works as
with those 4 more extra surfaces, does anybody know what is going on
there? I looks like it was used for B frames which are calculated
separately, because B frames maximum is 4.
2. rc_lookahead is defined default to -1, but in test condition if
(ctx->rc_lookahead) which sets lookahead it will be always true, i don't
know if this is intended behavior, so in default behavior is lookahead
always on!
This is default condition when rc_lokkahead is -1 (not defined on
cmdline), whis is maybe something that is not intended:
ctx->encode_config.rcParams.enableLookahead = 1;
ctx->encode_config.rcParams.lookaheadDepth = 0;
ctx->encode_config.rcParams.disableIadapt = 0;
ctx->encode_config.rcParams.disableBadapt = 0;
Signed-off-by: Timo Rothenpieler <timo@rothenpieler.org>
when meeting IDR frame, vaapi_encode_h264 poc number don't reset, now fix
this issue based on h264 spec. Some decoder don't care this case, but this
fix will enhance the encoder action. Before this fix, poc number is
negative in some case.
Reviewed-by: Jun Zhao <jun.zhao@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Wang, Yi A <yi.a.wang@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net>
This was not observed earlier because the only syntax element which
it normally misses with the current setup is slice_qp_delta, but that
is always going to be zero (in IDR frames QP isn't varied on the
slice) which will always exp-golomb code as a single 1 bit. The
immediately following part is the byte alignment, which is always a 1
bit followed by 0s which are ignored, so as long as the bitstream is
never aligned at that point we will never notice because the only
difference is that an ignored bit is a 1 instead of a 0.
(cherry picked from commit fc30a90898)
While outwardly bizarre, this change makes the behaviour consistent
with other VAAPI encoders which sync to the encode /input/ picture in
order to wait for /output/ from the encoder. It is not harmful on
i965 (because synchronisation already happens in vaRenderPicture(),
so it has no effect there), and it allows the encoder to work on
mesa/gallium which assumes this behaviour.
(cherry picked from commit 086e4b58b5)
This allows better checking of capabilities and will make it easier
to add more functionality later.
It also commonises some duplicated code around rate control setup
and adds more comments explaining the internals.
(cherry picked from commit 80a5d05108)
There should be an extra offset of 6 on bit_rate_scale and of 4 on
cpb_size_scale which were not accounted for here.
(cherry picked from commit 3a9662af6c)
Based on the draft spec at https://git.xiph.org/?p=flac.git;a=blob;f=doc/isoflac.txt
'-strict experimental' is required to create files in this format.
Signed-off-by: Matthew Gregan <kinetik@flim.org>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
FLAC streams originating from the FLAC encoder send updated and more
complete STREAMINFO metadata as part of the last packet, so write that
to CodecPrivate instead of the incomplete one available in extradata
during init.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
A negative extradata size for example gets passed to memcpy in
avcodec_parameters_from_context causing a segmentation fault.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Cadhalpun <Andreas.Cadhalpun@googlemail.com>
If realloc fails, the pointer is overwritten and the previously allocated
buffer is leaked, which goes against the expected behavior of keeping the
packet unchanged in case of error.
Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This makes av_stream_add_side_data() consistent with av_packet_add_side_data().
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Functionally similar to av_packet_add_side_data(). Allows the use of an
already allocated buffer as stream side data.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>