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.
QuickTime will play multiple audio tracks concurrently if this flag is
set for multiple audio tracks. And if no subtitle track has this flag
set, QuickTime will show no subtitles in the subtitle menu.
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
Other software does not store it in this case, and the information
is provided by the codec stream
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
The QuickTime specification does not contain any hint that the atom
must not be written in some cases and both the QuickTime and the
AVID decoders do not fail if the atom is present.
This change allows to signal (visually) interlaced streams with
a codec different from uncompressed video.
As a side-effect, this fixes ticket #2202
* commit 'e816034a5fa131b13c4ad87bb0b5065b4f5697c6':
fate-seek: remove use of gnu make 3.82 only private modifier
fate: move vsynth reference files to their own directory
fate: move fate-acodec reference files to their own dir
configure: avplay now depends on avresample
fate: split dependencies for fate-seek tests
Conflicts:
configure
tests/fate/seek.mak
Merged-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>