Initializes the mov text sample description from the ASS header and
creates an mov font table from the fonts available in the ASS Styles.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
Font sizes are relative to the subtitle frame dimensions. If the
expected frame dimensions are not known, the font sizes will most
likely be incorrect.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
Style flags were only being turned on. If the default was on and style
record turned off, style flag remained on.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
It's not necessary to walk the style record list twice per subtitle
character. style records are in order and do not overlap.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
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.
Those SEIs refer to the currently active SPS. However, since the SEI
NALUs precede the coded picture data in the bitstream, the active SPS is
in general not known when we are decoding the SEI.
Therefore, store the content of the picture timing SEIs and actually
parse it when the active SPS is known.
Such errors are not necessarily fatal and decoding might still be
possible, e.g. it happens for MVC streams where we do not handle the
subset SPS thus failing to parse its corresponding PPS.
Currently the frame pool used by the default get_buffer2()
implementation is a single struct, allocated when opening the decoder.
A pointer to it is simply copied to each frame thread and we assume that
no thread attempts to modify it at an unexpected time. This is rather
fragile and potentially dangerous.
With this commit, the frame pool is made refcounted, with the reference
being propagated across threads along with other context variables. The
frame pool is now also immutable - when the stream parameters change we
drop the old reference and create a new one.
Specifically, between the user-facing one and the first frame thread
one.
This is fragile and dangerous, allocate separate private data for each
per-thread context.
The current design, where
- proper init is called for the first per-thread context
- first thread's private data is copied into private data for all the
other threads
- a "fixup" function is called for all the other threads to e.g.
allocate dynamically allocated data
is very fragile and hard to follow, so it is abandoned. Instead, the
same init function is used to init each per-thread context. Where
necessary, AVCodecInternal.is_copy can be used to differentiate between
the first thread and the other ones (e.g. for decoding the extradata
just once).
subtitles.h has been included in order to use ff_subtitles_next_line()
to help parsing srt subtitles which at that time had their timing as
part of the payload and not as part of the AVPacket fields. When this
changed (in 55180b32) it has been forgotten to remove this header.
libavcodec/internal.h meanwhile has been added in bb47aa5850 and has
never been used at all.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
vobsub_read_packet() didn't check whether an array of AVPackets was
valid and therefore used uninitialized values.
Reviewed-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>