This way we can clean up separate definitions in functions with
just a single loop, as well as have no reuse between different
loops' counters in functions with multiple.
These fields are supposed to store information about the packet the
frame was decoded from, specifically the byte offset it was stored at
and its size.
However,
- the fields are highly ad-hoc - there is no strong reason why
specifically those (and not any other) packet properties should have a
dedicated field in AVFrame; unlike e.g. the timestamps, there is no
fundamental link between coded packet offset/size and decoded frames
- they only make sense for frames produced by decoding demuxed packets,
and even then it is not always the case that the encoded data was
stored in the file as a contiguous sequence of bytes (in order for pos
to be well-defined)
- pkt_pos was added without much explanation, apparently to allow
passthrough of this information through lavfi in order to handle byte
seeking in ffplay. That is now implemented using arbitrary user data
passthrough in AVFrame.opaque_ref.
- several filters use pkt_pos as a variable available to user-supplied
expressions, but there seems to be no established motivation for using them.
- pkt_size was added for use in ffprobe, but that too is now handled
without using this field. Additonally, the values of this field
produced by libavcodec are flawed, as described in the previous
ffprobe conversion commit.
In summary - these fields are ill-defined and insufficiently motivated,
so deprecate them.
Their usefulness is questionable, very few decoders set them, and their type
should have been int64_t. A replacement field can be added later if a valid use
case is found.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
The only duration field currently present in AVFrame is pkt_duration,
which is semantically restricted to those frames that are output by
decoders.
Add a new field that stores the frame's duration without regard for how
that frame was produced. Deprecate pkt_duration.
Normally, both the source and dest frame would have only the old API fields
set, only the new API fields set, or both set. But in some cases, like when
calling av_frame_ref() using a non reference counted source frame where only
the old channel layout API fields were populated, the result would be the dst
frame having both the new and old fields populated.
This commit takes this into account and fixes the checks by calling
av_channel_layout_compare() only if the source frame has the new API fields
set, and doing sanity checks for the source frame old API fields if the new
ones are not set.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
In order to be able to extend this struct later (as the Dolby Vision RPU
evolves), all of the 'container' structs are considered extensible, and
the individual constituent fields must instead be accessed via offsets.
The precedent for this style of access is set in
<libavutil/detection_bbox.h>
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Currently, it also tests whether extended_data points to something
different than the AVFrame's data array and frees extended_data
if it is different. Yet this is only necessary for one of its three
callers, namely av_frame_unref(); meanwhile the other two callers
took measures to avoid this (or rather, to make it to an av_free(NULL)).
This commit moves this chunk to av_frame_unref() (so that
get_frame_defaults() now treats its input as uninitialized)
and removes the now superfluous code in the other two callers.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
It is not used here at all; instead, add it where it is used without
including it or any of the arch-specific CPU headers.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
Originally deprecated in 1296b1f6c0631ab79464e22d48a6a1548450b943;
scheduled again for removal in a991526832.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
av_frame_copy() is allowed to return values >= 0 on success, whereas
the documentation of av_frame_ref() states that the return value is 0 on
success. Ergo the latter must not just return the former's return value.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This patch introduces a new frame side data type AVFilmGrainParams for use
with video codecs which support it.
It can save a lot of memory used for duplicate processed reference frames and
reduce copies when applying film grain during presentation.
This uses av_image_fill_plane_sizes instead of av_image_fill_pointers
when we are getting plane sizes to avoid UB from adding offsets to NULL.
Signed-off-by: Brian Kim <bkkim@google.com>
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
This is intended to replace the deprecated the AV_FRAME_DATA_QP_TABLE*
API and extend it to a wider range of codecs.
In the future, it may also be extended to support other encoding
parameters such as motion vectors.
Additional changes by Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net> with suggestions
by Lynne <dev@lynne.ee>.
Signed-off-by: Juan De León <juandl@google.com>
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
remove_side_data is supposed to remove a single instance by design.
Since new_side_data() doesn't forbid add multiple instances of the
same type, remove_side_data should deal with that.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
The encoders such as libx264 support different QPs offset for different MBs,
it makes possible for ROI-based encoding. It makes sense to add support
within ffmpeg to generate/accept ROI infos and pass into encoders.
Typical usage: After AVFrame is decoded, a ffmpeg filter or user's code
generates ROI info for that frame, and the encoder finally does the
ROI-based encoding.
The ROI info is maintained as side data of AVFrame.
Signed-off-by: Guo, Yejun <yejun.guo@intel.com>
Signed-off-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>
The dynamic metadata contains data for color volume transform -
application 4 of SMPTE 2094-40:2016 standard. The data comes from
HEVC in the SEI_TYPE_USER_DATA_REGISTERED_ITU_T_T35.
Signed-off-by: Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
Add error handle if av_image_fill_pointers fail.
Signed-off-by: Jun Zhao <mypopydev@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Create SMPTE ST 12-1 timecodes based on H.264 SEI picture timing
info.
For framerates > 30 FPS, the field flag is used in conjunction with
pairs of frames which contain the same frame timestamp in S12M.
Ensure the field is properly set per the spec.
* commit 'f89ec87afaf0d1abb6d450253b0b348fd554533b':
frame: Simplify the video allocation
Merged-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
Padding-Remixed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
PSEUDOPAL pixel formats are not paletted, but carried a palette with the
intention of allowing code to treat unpaletted formats as paletted. The
palette simply mapped the byte values to the resulting RGB values,
making it some sort of LUT for RGB conversion.
It was used for 1 byte formats only: RGB4_BYTE, BGR4_BYTE, RGB8, BGR8,
GRAY8. The first 4 are awfully obscure, used only by some ancient bitmap
formats. The last one, GRAY8, is more common, but its treatment is
grossly incorrect. It considers full range GRAY8 only, so GRAY8 coming
from typical Y video planes was not mapped to the correct RGB values.
This cannot be fixed, because AVFrame.color_range can be freely changed
at runtime, and there is nothing to ensure the pseudo palette is
updated.
Also, nothing actually used the PSEUDOPAL palette data, except xwdenc
(trivially changed in the previous commit). All other code had to treat
it as a special case, just to ignore or to propagate palette data.
In conclusion, this was just a very strange old mechnaism that has no
real justification to exist anymore (although it may have been nice and
useful in the past). Now it's an artifact that makes the API harder to
use: API users who allocate their own pixel data have to be aware that
they need to allocate the palette, or FFmpeg will crash on them in
_some_ situations. On top of this, there was no API to allocate the
pseuo palette outside of av_frame_get_buffer().
This patch not only deprecates AV_PIX_FMT_FLAG_PSEUDOPAL, but also makes
the pseudo palette optional. Nothing accesses it anymore, though if it's
set, it's propagated. It's still allocated and initialized for
compatibility with API users that rely on this feature. But new API
users do not need to allocate it. This was an explicit goal of this
patch.
Most changes replace AV_PIX_FMT_FLAG_PSEUDOPAL with FF_PSEUDOPAL. I
first tried #ifdefing all code, but it was a mess. The FF_PSEUDOPAL
macro reduces the mess, and still allows defining FF_API_PSEUDOPAL to 0.
Passes FATE with FF_API_PSEUDOPAL enabled and disabled. In addition,
FATE passes with FF_API_PSEUDOPAL set to 1, but with allocation
functions manually changed to not allocating a palette.
This adds a way for an API user to transfer QP data and metadata without
having to keep the reference to AVFrame, and without having to
explicitly care about QP APIs. It might also provide a way to finally
remove the deprecated QP related fields. In the end, the QP table should
be handled in a very similar way to e.g. AV_FRAME_DATA_MOTION_VECTORS.
There are two side data types, because I didn't care about having to
repack the QP data so the table and the metadata are in a single
AVBufferRef. Otherwise it would have either required a copy on decoding
(extra slowdown for something as obscure as the QP data), or would have
required making intrusive changes to the codecs which support export of
this data.
The new side data types are added under deprecation guards, because I
don't intend to change the status of the QP export as being deprecated
(as it was before this patch too).
Everything related to the QP data is deprecated, with qp_table_buf being
an inconsistent exception. Some parts were under the deprecation guards,
some not. It probably didn't even compile.