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>
We won't be able to seek back to write the actual duration anyway.
FATE-tests using the md5pipe command had to be updated due to this change.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
have tested on linux x86_32/64, mingw32/64 arm & mips qemu
Tested-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
Tested on x86-32/64, mingw32/64, arm & mips qemu
Tested-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
Up until now, the Matroska muxer would mark a track as default if it had
the disposition AV_DISPOSITION_DEFAULT or if there was no track with
AV_DISPOSITION_DEFAULT set; in the latter case even more than one track
of a kind (audio, video, subtitles) was marked as default which is not
sensible.
This commit changes the logic used to mark tracks as default. There are
now three modes for this:
a) In the "infer" mode the first track of every type (audio, video,
subtitles) with default disposition set will be marked as default; if
there is no such track (for a given type), then the first track of this
type (if existing) will be marked as default. This behaviour is inspired
by mkvmerge. It ensures that the default flags will be set in a sensible
way even if the input comes from containers that lack the concept of
default flags. This mode is the default mode.
b) The "infer_no_subs" mode is similar to the "infer" mode; the
difference is that if no subtitle track with default disposition exists,
no subtitle track will be marked as default at all.
c) The "passthrough" mode: Here the track will be marked as default if
and only the corresponding input stream had disposition default.
This fixes ticket #8173 (the passthrough mode is ideal for this) as
well as ticket #8416 (the "infer_no_subs" mode leads to the desired
output).
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>
The Matroska muxer currently only adds CuePoints in three cases:
a) For video keyframes. b) For the first audio frame in a new Cluster if
in DASH-mode. c) For subtitles. This means that ordinary Matroska audio
files won't have any Cues which impedes seeking.
This commit changes this. For every track in a file without video track
it is checked and tracked whether a Cue entry has already been added
for said track for the current Cluster. This is used to add a Cue entry
for each first packet of each track in each Cluster.
Implements #3149.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Moreover, putting the Cues in front of the Clusters by reserving space
in advance is also tested.
The new capability of using ffprobe during a remux/transcode test are
used here for information about the chapters.
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>
If there are Attachments to write, the Matroska muxer currently
allocates two objects: An array that contains an entry for each
AttachedFile containing just the stream index of the corresponding
stream and the FileUID used for this AttachedFile; and a structure with
a pointer to said array and a counter for said array. These uids are
generated via code special to Attachments: It uses an AVLFG in the
normal and a sha of the attachment data in the bitexact case. (Said sha
requires an allocation, too.)
But now that an uid is generated for each stream in mkv_init(), there is
no need any more to use special code for generating the FileUIDs of
AttachedFiles: One can simply use the uid already generated for the
corresponding stream. And this makes the whole allocations of the
structures for AttachedFiles as well as the structures itself superfluous.
They have been removed.
In case AVFMT_FLAG_BITEXACT is set, the uids will be different from the
old ones which is the reason why the FATE-test lavf-mkv_attachment
needed to be updated. The old method had the drawback that two
AttachedFiles with the same data would have the same FileUID.
The new one doesn't.
Also notice that the dynamic buffer used to write the Attachments leaks
if an error happens when writing the buffer. By removing the
allocations potential sources of errors have been removed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Tags in the Matroska file format can be summarized as follows: There is
a level 1-element called Tags containing one or many Tag elements each
of which in turn contain a Targets element and one or many SimpleTags.
Each SimpleTag roughly corresponds to a single key-value pair similar to
an AVDictionaryEntry. The Targets meanwhile contains information to what
the metadata contained in the SimpleTags contained in the containing Tag
applies (i.e. to the file as a whole or to an individual track).
The Matroska muxer writes such metadata. It puts the metadata of every
stream into a Tag whose Targets makes it point to the corresponding
track. And if the output is seekable, then it also adds another Tag for
each track whose Targets corresponds to the track and where it reserves
space in a SimpleTag to write the duration at the end of the muxing
process into.
Yet there is no reason to write two Tag elements for a track and a few
bytes (typically 24 bytes per track) can be saved by adding the duration
SimpleTag to the other Tag of the same track (if it exists).
FATE has been updated because the output files changed. (Tests that
write to unseekable output (pipes) needn't be updated (no duration tag
has ever been written for them) and the same applies to tests without
further metadata.)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
It represents the relationship between them more naturally and will be
useful in the following commits.
Allows significantly more frames in fate-h264-attachment-631 to be
decoded.
containing updated extradata, in this case a new FLAC streaminfo.
Furthermore, it also tests that the Matroska muxer is able to preserve
uncommon channel layouts by adding Vorbis comments to the CodecPrivate.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
mkvmerge versions 6.2 to 40.0 had a bug that made it not propagate the
WavPack extradata (containing the WavPack version) during remuxing from
a Matroska file; currently our demuxer would treat every WavPack block
encountered as invalid data (unless the WavPack stream is to be
discarded (i.e. the streams discard is >= AVDISCARD_ALL)) and try to
resync to the next level 1 element.
Luckily, the WavPack version is currently not really important; so we
fix this problem by assuming a version. David Bryant, the creator of
WavPack, recommended using version 0x410 (the most recent version) for
this. And this is what this commit does.
A FATE-test for this has been added.
Reviewed-by: David Bryant <david@wavpack.com>
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>
This fixes mpeg2video stream copies to mpeg muxer like this:
ffmpeg -i xdcamhd.mxf -c:v copy output.mpg
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Utilizes a subpicture sample with one decodable subpicture for the
test.
Based on a failing test case in reported by Michael in
https://ffmpeg.org/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2019-February/240398.html
which at the time had no test case for it.
Additionally, this is the first test case for the presentation
graphics format.
According to the H.264 specifications, the only NAL units that need to
have four byte startcodes in H.264 Annex B format are SPS/PPS units and
units that start a new access unit. Before af7e953a, the first of these
conditions wasn't upheld as already existing in-band parameter sets
would not automatically be written with a four byte startcode, but only
when they already were at the beginning of their input packets. But it
made four byte startcodes be used too often as every unit that is written
together with a parameter set that is inserted from extradata received a
four byte startcode although a three byte start code would suffice
unless the unit itself were a parameter set.
FATE has been updated to reflect the changes. Although the patch leaves
the extradata unchanged, the size of the extradata according to the FATE
reports changes. This is due to a quirk in ff_h2645_packet_split which
is used by extract_extradata: If the input is Annex B, the first zero of
a four byte startcode is considered a part of the last unit (if any).
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
The standard does not seem to require the counter to be zero based, but some
checker tools (MyriadBits MXFInspect, Interra Baton) have validations against 0
start...
Fixes ticket #6781.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
RFC 3986 states that the generic syntax uses the slash ("/"), question mark
("?"), and number sign ("#") characters to delimit components that are
significant to the generic parser's hierarchical interpretation of an
identifier.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
When a Matroska Block is only stored in compressed form, the size of
the uncompressed block is not explicitly coded and therefore not known
before decompressing it. Therefore the demuxer uses a guess for the
uncompressed size: The first guess is three times the compressed size
and if this is not enough, it is repeatedly incremented by a factor of
three. But when this happens with lzo, the decompression is neither
resumed nor started again. Instead when av_lzo1x_decode indicates that x
bytes of input data could not be decoded, because the output buffer is
already full, the first (not the last) x bytes of the input buffer are
resent for decoding in the next try; they overwrite already decoded
data.
This commit fixes this by instead restarting the decompression anew,
just with a bigger buffer.
This seems to be a regression since 935ec5a1.
A FATE-test for this has been added.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This test tests that demuxing ProRes that is muxed like it should be in
Matroska (i.e. with the first header ("icpf") atom stripped away) works;
it also tests bz2 decompression as well as the handling of
unknown-length clusters.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Up until now, the microdvd demuxer uses av_strdup() to allocate the
extradata from a string; its length is set to strlen() + 1, i.e.
including the \0 at the end. Upon remuxing, the muxer would simply copy
the extradata at the beginning, including the \0.
This commit changes this by not adding the \0 to the size of the
extradata; the muxer now delimits extradata by inserting a \n. This
required to change the subtitles-microdvd-remux FATE-test.
Furthermore, the extradata is now allocated with zeroed padding.
The microdvd decoder is not affected by this, as it didn't use the size
of the extradata at all, but treated it as a C-string.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
5 cabac states for cbf_cb and cbf_cr are supported according to
Table 9-4.
Add a test for 64x64 4:4:4 8bit HEVC clips with TUDepth = 4, cbf_cr > 0.
Signed-off-by: Xu Guangxin <guangxin.xu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Linjie Fu <linjie.fu@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The IVF muxer autoinserts the av1_metadata filter unconditionally, which is
not desirable for these tests.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The tremolo filter uses floating point internally, and uses
multiplication factors derived from sin(fmod()), neither of
which is bitexact for use with framecrc.
This fixes running this test when built with for mingw/x86_32
with clang.
In this case, a 1 ulp difference in the output from fmod() would
end up in an output from the filter that differs by 1 ulp, but
which makes the lrint() in swresample/audioconvert.c round in a
different direction.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
contained in Vorbis comments in the CodecPrivate of flac tracks.
Moreover, it also tests header removal compression.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This test contains a track with zlib compressed CodecPrivate in addition
to compressed frames; the former was unchecked before.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Fixes: fate-fitsdec-bitpix-64
Possibly Fixes: -nan is outside the range of representable values of type 'unsigned short'
Possibly Fixes: 17769/clusterfuzz-testcase-minimized-ffmpeg_AV_CODEC_ID_FITS_fuzzer-5678314672357376
Found-by: continuous fuzzing process https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/tree/master/projects/ffmpeg
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Allows the creation of the sdtp atom while remuxing MP4 to MP4. This
atom is required by Apple devices (iPhone, Apple TV) in order to accept
2160p medias.
A threshold of 1 is sufficient for simple_dump_cut.webm, 10 is used
just to be sure the next truncated file doesnt cause the same issue
Obvious alternative fixes are to simply accept that the file is broken or to
write some advanced error concealment or to
simply accept that the decoder wont stop at the end of input.
Fixes: Ticket 8069 (artifacts not the differing md5 which was there before 1afd246960)
Fixes: simple_dump_cut.webm
Fixes: regression of 1afd246960
fate-vp5 changes because the last frame is truncated and now handled
differently.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Right now, the concat filter does not set the frame_rate value on any of
the out links. As a result, the default ffmpeg behaviour kicks in - to
copy the framerate from the first input to the outputs.
If a later input is higher framerate, this results in dropped frames; if
a later input is lower framerate it might cause judder.
This patch checks if all of the video inputs have the same framerate, and
if not it sets the out link to use '1/0' as the frame rate, the value
meaning "unknown/vfr".
A test is added to verify the VFR behaviour. The existing test for CFR
behaviour passes unchanged.
This makes the code bitexact between platforms.
Intermediate timestamps between frames are preserved.
The timebase is simplified.
Rounding differs from doubles in cases where timestamps/durations
are "funny"
Suggested-by: jb
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This reverts commit a9dacdeea6.
This patch effectively made the decoder output vfr content out of samples
where cfr is expected.
Addresses ticket #7880.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The packet counting based approach caused excessive sdt/pat/pmt for VBR, so
let's use a timestamp based approach instead similar to how we emit PCRs.
SDT/PAT/PMT period should be consistent for both VBR and CBR from now on.
Also change the type of sdt_period and pat_period to AV_OPT_TYPE_DURATION so no
floating point math is necessary.
Fixes ticket #3714.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
This fixes make fate issue for frame thread scale in my local testing
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
At the moment scene change detection score uses all planes to detect scene
changes. In this regard this is similar how the frozen frames detection works.
However, in classic encoding scene change detection typically only uses the Y
plane.
We might get more resonable scores for scene change if we also use only
the Y plane for calculating the score if the pixel format is YUV. Although
this will require additional work once packed YUV formats are added,
because for the moment the generic scene sad score calculation has no way
to ignore some components in a packed format.
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
cuda_runtime.h as well as dynlink_loader.h used nonstandard inclusion
guards with an AV_ prefix, although these files are not in an libav*/
path. So change the inclusion guards and adapt the ref file of the
source fate test accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Timo Rothenpieler <timo@rothenpieler.org>
why change .4 to .25, it's for:
one scenecut(pkt_pts=20040) isn't detected by 0.4 threshold
why not change to 0.3 instead of 0.25:
it will miss the scenecut(pkt_pts=20040) after applying the next
patch which enables yuvj420
for fate testing, it's better to catch all scenecut scenes.
Reviewed-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Signed-off-by: Limin Wang <lance.lmwang@gmail.com>
The tests previously rounded the timestamps. Its better in a fate test to preserve
the data from the demuxer and decoder.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Commit cd48318035 added support for NV24 and NV42, including several
fate tests for these formats, but did not include the reference files
for the tests filter-pixdesc-nv24 and filter-pixdesc-nv42. As a result,
these two tests were broken.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
The implementation is pretty straight-forward. Most of the existing
NV12 codepaths work regardless of subsampling and are re-used as is.
Where necessary I wrote the slightly different NV24 versions.
Finally, the one thing that confused me for a long time was the
asm specific x86 path that did an explicit exclusion check for NV12.
I replaced that with a semi-planar check and also updated the
equivalent PPC code, which Lauri kindly checked.
These are the 4:4:4 variants of the semi-planar NV12/NV21 formats.
These formats are not used much, so we've never had a reason to add
them until now. VDPAU recently added support HEVC 4:4:4 content
and when you use the OpenGL interop, the returned surfaces are in
NV24 format, so we need the pixel format for media players, even
if there's no direct use within ffmpeg.
Separately, there are apparently webcams that use NV24, but I've
never seen one.
Up until now, the length field of most level 1 elements has been written
using eight bytes, although it is known in advance how much space the
content of said elements will take up so that it would be possible to
determine the minimal amount of bytes for the length field. This
commit changes this.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Given that in both the seekable as well as the non-seekable mode dynamic
buffers are used to write level 1 elements and that now no seeks are
used in the seekable case any more, the two modes can be combined; as a
consequence, the non-seekable mode automatically inherits the ability to
write CRC-32 elements.
There are no differences in case the output is seekable; when it is not
and writing CRC-32 elements is disabled, there can still be minor
differences because before this commit, the EBML ID and length field
were counted towards the cluster size limit; now they no longer are.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Up until now the EBML Header length field has been written with eight
bytes, although the EBML Header is always so small that only one byte
is needed for it. This patch saves seven bytes for every Matroska/Webm
file.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The spec in https://xiph.org/vorbis/doc/v-comment.html states that
the metadata keys are case-insensitive, so don't change the case
and update the fate test case.
Fix#7784
Reviewed-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhao <barryjzhao@tencent.com>
write_tmcd allows tmcd track to be created with any mode but in
mov_write_header, index for first tmcd track is only set for modes
MP4 or MOV, causing a crash if tmcd creation is attempted with other
modes.
* commit 'f8df5e2f31a5ba7b30a0e1caaaf5a03c753b3f9b':
tests: Add a convenience function for video-only lavf tests
Merged-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
* commit 'a70eac7a9b193e8434b5bed90bd72aa4cb688363':
tests: Convert image2pipe tests to non-legacy test scripts
Merged-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
When a JACOsub subtitle has two timestamps, they represent its start and
end times (http://unicorn.us.com/jacosub/jscripts.html#l_times); the
duration is the difference between the two, not the sum of the two.
The subtitle end times in the FATE test for this were wrong as a result;
fix them too. (This test is based on JACOsub's demo.txt, and the end
time computed for the last line using @ now matches what the comments
there say it should be.)
Also tested in practice using MPV, a LaserDisc, and some authentic 1993
JACOsub files.
Signed-off-by: Adam Sampson <ats@offog.org>
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
If we fill with black then the generated palette will have one color more
than what the user requested. This also resulted in unwanted black specks in
the output of paletteuse, especially when generating small palettes.
The VP3/4/5/6 reference decoders all use three IDCT versions: one for the
DC-only case, another for blocks with more than 10 coefficients, and an
optimised one for blocks with up to 10 AC coefficents. VP6 relies on the
sparse 10 coefficient version, and without it, IDCT drift occurs.
Fixes: https://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/1282
Signed-off-by: Peter Ross <pross@xvid.org>
Change the some options location in avcodec_options to make code more
readable. And update the fate test with this change.
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhao <mypopydev@gmail.com>
Now "-c copy" works.
Update FATE files.
Demuxer only split file into packets, no data is trimmed.
Encoder & muxer currently expect completely another format
where muxer writes stuff like disposal method which should
be really encoder job.
With this patch muxer only modifies delay between two packets.
Codec copy need to have same behavior between demuxer and
muxer to work correctly.
Fixes#6640.
The header guards were unnecessarily non-standard and the c file
inclusion trick means the files dont't have standard licence
headers.
Based on a patch by: Martin Vignali <martin.vignali@gmail.com>
This is needed because of 32bit float formats (which are difficult to
store in 16bits)
This also fixes undefined behavior found by fate
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
ISMV lacks any sort of edit list support, as well as tfxd is
effectively the PTS of the fragment for most intents and purposes.
Thus, if b-frames are requested without negative CTS offsets you
end up with N frames' worth of delay (tfxd PTS plus the CTS offset
of the first sample). Negative CTS offsets enable the first sample
to have CTS=DTS, and thus a/v desync due to b-frame reorder delay
is avoided.
Fixes vorbis mp4 audio files, with edit list specified. Since
st->skip_samples is not set in case of vorbis , ffmpeg computes the
start_time as negative.
Signed-off-by: Sasi Inguva <isasi@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>