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docs/random/bbb/subtitles: Add some first mind rumblings on proper subtitle support.
Original commit message from CVS: * docs/random/bbb/subtitles: Add some first mind rumblings on proper subtitle support.
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2004-12-25 Ronald S. Bultje <rbultje@ronald.bitfreak.net>
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* docs/random/bbb/subtitles:
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Add some first mind rumblings on proper subtitle support.
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2004-12-24 Thomas Vander Stichele <thomas at apestaart dot org>
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* po/ca.po:
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Subtitles
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=========
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1. Problem
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GStreamer currently does not support subtitles.
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2. Proposed solution
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- Elements
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- Text-overlay
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- Autoplugging
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- Scheduling
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- Stream selection
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The first thing we'll need is subtitle awareness. I'll focus on AVI/MKV/OGM
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here, because I know how that works. The same methods apply to DVD subtitles
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as well. The matroska demuxer (and Ogg) will need subtitle awareness. For
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AVI, this is not needed. Secondly, we'll need subtitle stream parsers (for
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all popular subtitle formats), that can deal both with parsed streams (MKV,
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OGM) as well as .sub file chunks (AVI). Sample code is available in
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gst-sandbox/textoverlay/.
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Secondly, we'll need a textoverlay filter that can take text and video and
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blits text on video. We have several such elements (e.g. the cairo-based
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element) in gst-plugins already. Those might need some updates to work
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exactly as expected.
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Thirdly, playbin will need to handle all that. We expect subtitle streams
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to end up as subimages or plain text (or xhtml text). Note that playbin
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should also allow access to the unblitted subtitle as text (if available)
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for accessibility purposes.
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A problem popping up is that subtitles are no continuous streams. This is
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especially noticeable in the MKV/OGM case, because there the input of data
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depends on the other streams, so we'll only notice delays inside an element
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when we've received the next data chunk. There are two possible solutions:
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using timestamped filler events or using decoupled subtitle overlay elements
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(bins, probably). The first has as a difficulty that it only works well in
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the AVI/.sub case, where we will notice discontinuities before they become
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problematic. The second is more difficult to implement, but works for both
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cases.
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A) fillers
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Imagine that two subtitles come after each other, with 10 seconds of no-data
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in between. By parsing a .sub file, we would notice immediately and we could
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send a filler event (or empty data) with a timestamp and duration in between.
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B) decoupled
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Imagine this text element:
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------------------------------
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video ----- | actual element |out
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| / -----------------|
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text - - |
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------------------------------
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where the text pad is decoupled, like a queue. When no text data is available,
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the pad will have received no data, and the element will render no subtitles.
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The actual element can be a bin here, containing another subtitle rendering
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element. Disadvantage: it requires threading, and the element itself is (in
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concept) kinda gross. The element can be embedded in playbin to hide this
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fact (i.e. not be available outside the scope of playbin).
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Whichever solution we take, it'll require effort from the implementer.
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Scheduling (process, not implementation) knowledge is assumed.
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Stream selection is a problem that audio has, too. We'll need a solution for
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this at the playback bin level, e.g. playbin. By muting all unused streams
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and dynamically unmuting the selected stream, this is easily solved. Note
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that synchronization needs to be checked in this case. The solution is not
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hard, but someone has to do it.
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3. Written by
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Ronald S. Bultje <rbultje@ronald.bitfreak.net>, Dec. 25th, 2004
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