avcodec_enum_to_chroma_pos() and avcodec_chroma_pos_to_enum()
deal with enum AVChromaLocation which is defined in lavu.
These functions are therefore replaced by
av_chroma_location_enum_to_pos() and av_chroma_location_pos_to_enum().
This commit provides the necessary deprecations. Also already make
these functions wrappers around the corresponding lavu functions
as not doing so would force one to disable deprecation warnings.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
They are intended as replacements for avcodec_enum_to_chroma_pos()
and avcodec_chroma_pos_to_enum().
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
They are also frequently used in libavformat.
This change does not cause any breakage as avcodec.h
includes defs.h.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
These are the formats we want/need to use when dealing with the Intel
VAAPI decoder for 12bit 4:2:0, 12bit 4:2:2, 10bit 4:4:4 and 12bit 4:4:4
respectively.
As with the already supported Y210 and YUVX (XVUY) formats, they are
based on formats Microsoft picked as their preferred 4:2:2 and 4:4:4
video formats, and Intel ran with it.
P12 and Y212 are simply an extension of 10 bit formats to say 12 bits
will be used, with 4 unused bits instead of 6.
XV30, and XV36, as exotic as they sound, are variants of Y410 and Y412
where the alpha channel is left formally undefined. We prefer these
over the alpha versions because the hardware cannot actually do
anything with the alpha channel and respecting it is just overhead.
Y412/XV46 is a normal looking packed 4 channel format where each
channel is 16bits wide but only the 12msb are used (like P012).
Y410/XV30 packs three 10bit channels in 32bits with 2bits of alpha,
like A/X2RGB10 style formats. This annoying layout forced me to define
the BE version as a bitstream format. It seems like our pixdesc
infrastructure can handle the LE version being byte-defined, but not
when it's reversed. If there's a better way to handle this, please
let me know. Our existing X2 formats all have the 2 bits at the MSB
end, but this format places them at the LSB end and that seems to be
the root of the problem.
It has been deprecated in b4f59beeb4,
but the attribute_deprecated was not set and there was no entry
in APIchanges. This commit adds these and schedules it for removal.
Given that the reason behind the deprecation is exactly the same
as in av_fopen_utf8(), reuse its FF_API_AV_FOPEN_UTF8.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>
This is the alphaless version of VUYA that I introduced recently. After
further discussion and noting that the Intel vaapi driver explicitly
lists XYUV as a support format for encoding and decoding 8bit 444
content, we decided to switch our usage and avoid the overhead of
having a declared alpha channel around.
Note that I am not removing VUYA, as this turned out to have another
use, which was to replace the need for v408enc/dec when dealing with
the format.
The vaapi switching will happen in the next change
According to its documentation it returns "pts of the last muxed packet
+ its duration", but the value it actually returns right now is
(possibly guessed) dts after muxer-internal bitstream filtering (if
any).
This function was added for ffmpeg.c, but it is not used there anymore.
Since the value it returns is ill-defined and so inappropriate for any
serious use, deprecate it.
The "AYUV" format is defined by Microsoft as their preferred format for
4:4:4 content, and so it is the format used by Intel VAAPI and QSV.
As Microsoft like to define their byte ordering in little-endian
fashion, the memory order is reversed, and so our pix_fmt, which
follows memory order, has a reversed name (VUYA).
This functionally already exists, but as pointed out in #9672 and #9673,
requiring users to manually include filters is clumsy, error-prone and
hard to use together with tools like ffplay.
To streamline ICC profile support, add a new AVCodecContext flag to
globally enable reading and writing ICC profiles, automatically, for all
appropriate media types.
Note that this commit only includes the new API. The implementation is
split off to separate commits for readability.
Signed-off-by: Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
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.
This new function makes it possible to use avio_printf() functionality from
a function taking a variable list of arguments.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>
Since every DLL can use an individual CRT on Windows, having
an exported function that opens a FILE* won't work if that
FILE* is going to be used from a different DLL (or from user
application code).
Internally within the libraries, the issue can be worked around
by duplicating the function in all libraries (this already happened
implicitly because the function resided in file_open.c) and renaming
the function to ff_fopen_utf8 (so that it doesn't end up exported from
the DLLs) and duplicating it in all libraries that use it.
This makes the avpriv_fopen_utf8 / ff_fopen_utf8 function work in
the exact same way as the existing avpriv_open / ff_open, with the
same setup as introduced in e743e7ae6e.
That mechanism doesn't work for external users, thus deprecate the
existing function.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
This avoids unnecessary churn and build breakage for users, by
making sure the whole version.h is included like it has been so far,
while keeping the benefit of not needing to rebuild most files in
the ffmpeg tree on minor/micro bumps.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Also bump the minor versions of all libraries, to signify the
API change of splitting the version.h headers and adding the
new version_major.h header.
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
Users should switch to the superior AVFifo API.
Unfortunately AVFifoBuffer fields cannot be marked as deprecated because
it would trigger a warning wherever fifo.h is #included, due to
inlined av_fifo_peek2().
Many AVFifoBuffer users operate on fixed-size elements (e.g. pointers),
but the current FIFO API deals exclusively in bytes, requiring extra
complexity in all these callers.
Add a new AVFifo API creating a FIFO with an element size
that may be larger than a byte. All operations on such a FIFO then
operate on complete elements.
This API does not reuse AVFifoBuffer and its API at all, but instead uses
an opaque struct called AVFifo. The AVFifoBuffer API will be deprecated
in a future commit once all of its users have been switched to the new
API.
Not reusing AVFifoBuffer also allowed to use the full range of size_t
from the beginning.
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>
Otherwise there is no way to detect an error returned by avio_close() because
ff_format_io_close cannot get the return value.
Checking the return value of the close function is important in order to check
if all data was successfully written and the underlying close() operation was
successful.
It can also be useful even for read mode because it can return any pending
AVIOContext error, so the user don't have to manually check AVIOContext->error.
In order to still support if the user overrides io_close, the generic code only
uses io_close2 if io_close is either NULL or the default io_close callback.
Signed-off-by: Marton Balint <cus@passwd.hu>