Assume a file with atoms in the following order: moov, mdat, moof,
mdat, moof ...
The first moov usually doesn't contain any sample entries atoms (or
they are all set to 0 length), because the real samples are signaled
at the moofs. In push mode, qtdemux parses the moov and then finds the mdat,
but then it has 0 entries and assumes it is EOS.
This patch makes it continue parsing in case it is a fragmented file so that
it might find the moofs and play the media.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710623
In push mode, when qtdemux can't use a seek to skip the mdat buffer it has
to buffer it for later use.
The issue is that after parsing the next moov/moof, there might be some
trailing bytes from the next atom in the file. This data was being discarded
along with the already parsed moov/moof and playback would fail to continue
after the contents of this moov/moof are played.
This is particularly bad on fragmented files that have the mdat before the
corresponding moof. So you'd get:
mdat|moof|mdat|moof ...
When a moof was received, it usually came with some extra bytes that would
belong to the next mdat (because upstream doesn't care about atoms alignment).
So those bytes were being discarded and playback would fail.
This patch makes qtdemux store those extra bytes to reuse them later after the
mdat is emptied.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710623
Use g_date_time seconds manipulation to allow to cover the quicktime
spec for creation_time. It uses seconds since 1904.
Both paths could be done using the generic approach of seconds since
1904 with GDateTime handling, but the first path using seconds from
1970 should be more commonly found and avoids a few objects creation and
ref/unref, so keep it there for performance.
Additionally, the code for handling seconds since 1970 changed from >
to >= because having 0 seconds since 1970 is also a valid case for that
path to handle.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707975
Check for GST_SEEK_TYPE_NONE for stop poistion and only update
the stop time if it is requested. Otherwise just maintain whatever
was stored at the segment
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707530
When the segment has a defined stop position, qtdemux should check
when streams reach this position and mark those as EOS. When all
streams are EOS it will return GST_FLOW_EOS to upstream to allow
the pipeline to finish instead of continuously consume buffers
from upstream that are not useful for the segment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707530
When handling seeks in push mode, qtdemux converts the seek to bytes
and pushes upstream. It needs to keep track of the seek and the
subsequent segment to be able to map them back to the requested
seek time and properly preserve the segment stop of the seek.
This is done by using the start offset in bytes of the seek,
that should be the same of the segment from upstream. And this
is also backwards compatible with what qtdemux already was using.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707530
Amendment 2 of ISO/IEC 14496-15 (AVC file format) is defining a new
structure for fragmented MP4 called "avc3". The principal difference
between AVC1 and AVC3 is the location of the codec initialisation
data (e.g. SPS, PPS). In AVC1 this data is placed in the initial
MOOV box (moov.trak.mdia.minf.stbl.stsd.avc1) but in AVC3 this data
goes in the first sample of every fragment (i.e. the first sample in
each mdat box). The principal reason for avc3 is to make it easier
for client implementations, because it removes the requirement to
insert the SPS+PPS in to the decoder pipeline every time there is a
representation change.
This commit adds support for the "avc3" atom, which is almost identical
to the "avc1" atom, except it does not contain any SPS or PPS data.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702004
This should make decoders able to precisely push buffers until the stop
time in case they need the next keyframe to do it.
Also, according to gst_segment_clip, it should only push a buffer that
the starting ts is strictly smaller than the segment stop, so we change
the min < comparison for <=
Use the same seqnum on messages and events for derived events.
Fixed for flushes / stream-start / segment after a seek, and segment
after a segment.
Fixes#676242
cca2f555d1 introduces a regression, where the demux segment is not
reset on flush stop, so the next upstream segment event will calculate
an invalid base time on the new segment to be sent downstream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704255
This can only reliably work if demuxers have a
separate streaming thread per srcpad. This should be
done in a demuxer base class, which integrates parts
of multiqueue
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701856
bug #700505
Following a representation change that causes a resolution change,
the video decoder fails to decode correctly. Dashdemux detects the
representation change and pushes a new caps event and an
initialization segment (a new moov atom) to the downstream qtdemux,
but it doesn't handle this new moov yet, it will only parse the
first one it receives.
This commit changes qtdemux to accept a new moov in a dash bitstream
switching scenario.
In case qtdemux is handling a mss stream, do not mark the stream to wait
for EOS after a segment. Even if it seems to be the last one according to
the current streams information.
MSS handling is different here because there is another demuxer driving
the pipeline
The samplerate field in the STSD atom is not right for some ALAC files
(usually when audio is 96kHz/24bits), so the audio caps must be
extracted from the codec data.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700382
Whenever the demuxer has a new caps on a stream, it should set the
new_caps variable to true and a new caps event will be pushed before
the next buffer
qtdemux takes its buffers from a GstAdapter. Those buffers are created
from the larger buffer that it obtained from upstream and they carry
the same flags, including DISCONT if it is set. In these cases, all
buffers that qtdemux is going to push would be marked as DISCONT.
This scenario can make parsers/decoders flush on every buffer leading
to no decoding at all hapenning. This patch prevents this by unsetting
the flag if it shouldn't be set.
* Explicitly init variables for fragmented formats at init
* Do not use GstClockTime type if the variable isn't a timestamp
* Fix a style/readability issue at an if block
* Group 2 mss mode conditional blocks together to improve readability
Conflicts:
gst/isomp4/qtdemux.c
This can confuse downstream when they get a byte segment after receiving
the natural time segment from qtdemux that it sends when starting to
push buffers. This is specially the case with parsers that try to
convert the position from byte to time format and might miss the
correct position for playback to start.
Reset different variables on state changes to ready and when
handling a flush-stop. For handling flush stops we should check
if there is an upstream adaptive demuxer driving the pipeline as this
means that qtdemux will get a new moov atom. For 'standard' isomedia
streams this isn't true and qtdemux should keep the previous moov
information around.
Conflicts:
gst/isomp4/qtdemux.c
Whenever dashdemux switches bitrates it sends a new moov with the
new stream configuration. qtdemux should now handle this by splitting
the exposing and configuration of streams into separate functions. When
the stream is new it is configured and exposed, when it is a new bitrate
of an existing stream it is only reconfigured.
Conflicts:
gst/isomp4/qtdemux.c
smoothstreaming streams should be handled as a special kind of
fragmented isomedia. In MSS the fragments will not contain a
'moov' atom with the media descriptions, this has to be extracted
from the caps.
Additionally, there should be another demuxer upstream that is likely
going to be the one to answer/act on queries and events, so qtdemux has
to forward those upstream.
Don't unmap short MOOV atom buffer twice, which happened
in the case where we don't fix up the MOOV atom.
Fixes crashes when thumbnailing partial mp4 file where
the MOOV atom is still incomplete.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694010
Fixes abort in push mode where the source is not seekable and the
size of the file is not available, as with
cat foo.mp4 | gst-launch-1.0 playbin uri=fd://0
Less noticable with releases, since we disable all
g_assert() there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=686008
Don't reset the segment because we need the values for accumulation. the segment
is reset at start and after a flushing seek. Fixes some problems with files with
quicktime segments.
MPEG DASH has defined a set of new boxes to specify duration, indexes and
offsets of ISOBMFF fragments.
The Track Fragment Base Media Decode Time (tfdt) Box can in particular be
included inside a traf box to specify the absolute decode time, measured on the
media timeline, of the first sample in decode order in the track fragment.
This information can be used by the isomp4 demux to find out the current position of
an MP4 fragment in the timeline.
This patch adds code to isomp4 to:
- parse the tfdt box
- adjust the time/position member of the new segment sent when playback starts
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677535
When it receives a seek in push mode, the qtdemux should first try to push the event upstream, and only if upstream fails fall back to
its own seek logic.
This fixes a not-negotiated error at least on mov files with
twos audio with two channels and video dvcp. As playbin and gst-launch
sample coming from the qtdemux.c file uses audioconvert and the latter
require format interleaved.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=675326
We do an ALLOCATION query to find out an allocator and parameters on the
srcpads. This way decoders (and sinks) can specify the memory and parameters
they want us to write into.
Set PTS and DTS on output buffers instead of just the PTS. In streaming cases
you want to synchronized encoded data based on the DTS because that is
monotonically increasing.
If the bitrates for all but one audio/video streams are known, and the
total stream size and duration can be determined, this calculates the
unkown bitrate as (stream size / duration) - (sum of known bitrates).
While this is not guaranteed to be very accurate, it should be good
enough for most purposes.
For example, this is useful for H.263 + AAC streams where no 'btrt' atom
is available for the video portion.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=619548
This parses the 'damr' atom if present, and exports the maximum bitrate
of the stream using the mode set field to determine the highest bitrate
frame type that might be present.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=620186