Right now those muxers use the default timebase in all cases(1/90000).
This patch avoid unnecessary rescaling and makes the printed timestamps
more readable.
Also, extend the printed information to include the timebases and packet
pts/duration and align the columns.
Obviously changes the results of all fate tests which use those two
muxers.
Causes FFmpeg to pass through the correct pts values,
instead of clobbering all to AV_NOPTS_VALUE (the av_init_packet
default) to then make up new ones based on only fps when muxing.
Included are also the related FATE ref changes, which all
some reasonable on quick investigation.
Also set all H.264 references to us -vsync drop to reduce the
diff for the ref files.
Otherwise almost all H.264 references need to change, mostly due
to now starting with negative pts values.
About 20 additional H.264 conformance tests needed -vsync
drop anyway because they create pts values that are out of
order and thus not possible to mux otherwise.
Signed-off-by: Reimar Döffinger <Reimar.Doeffinger@gmx.de>
* qatar/master:
ulti: Fix invalid reads
lavf: dealloc private options in av_write_trailer
yadif: support 10bit YUV
vc1: mark with ER_MB_ERROR bits overconsumption
lavc: introduce ER_MB_END and ER_MB_ERROR
error_resilience: use the ER_ namespace
build: move inclusion of subdir.mak to main subdir loop
rv34: NEON optimised 4x4 dequant
rv34: move 4x4 dequant to RV34DSPContext
aacdec: Use intfloat.h rather than local punning union.
Conflicts:
libavcodec/h264.c
libavcodec/vc1dec.c
libavfilter/vf_yadif.c
libavformat/Makefile
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
This patch is a generalization of what Michael Niedermayer
fixed in a single case.
The wmv8-drm fate test had been updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Luca Barbato <lu_zero@gentoo.org>
AVFMT_NOTIMESTAMPS for crc, as it ignores the timestamps.
AVFMT_VARIABLE_FPS for framecrc, as it prints dts.
Many FATE changes, because avconv is no longer duplicating frames in
those tests.
Also added -vsync 0 for some tests to prevent avconv from dropping
frames until it can be fixed more properly.