Instead of always keeping a safe segment (start=0) event from the beginning,
delay the creation of this event to when we really know the timestamp of the
first sample. This is important to properly start fragmented streams that
we might join in the middle or to play isolated fragment files that might
have an advanced tfdt.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752603
Fragmented files often use elst.duration=0 which before
ee78825eae was wrongly interpreted as
having no frames.
Since that issue has now been fixed, there is no reason to disable edit
lists in fragmented files. This commit enables them, therefore producing
correct stream time for files containing edit lists.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793058
Since ca068865c3 the duration of the first
frame is not used for estimating the frame rate.
For this purpose, stream->first_duration was initialized with the
duration of the first frame. In fragmented files, this was previously
done by peeking the first moof, but that can only be done in pull mode.
Fortunately, we don't really need to do that, at least with the current
design: When we are estimating the frame rate we already have the
sample table, regardless of the scheduling mode and whether the file is
fragmented or not, so we can obtain first_duration there much more
reliably.
This fixes frame rate estimation for fragmented files in push mode.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796384
Whenever got new moov or new stream-start,
demux will try to expose new pad by following rule.
Comparing stream-id in the current moov with previous one, then
* If matched stream-id is found from previous one,
reuse existing pad (most common case)
* Otherwise, expose new pad with new stream-start
* No more used stream will be freed
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684790
Whenever demux got moov, demux will create new stream. Only exception is
duplicated track-id in a moov box. In that case the first stream
will be accepted. This patch is pre-work for rework of moov handling.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684790
Supports CEA 608 and CEA 708 CC streams
Also supports usage in "Robust Prefill" mode if the incoming caption
stream is constant (i.e. there is one incoming CC buffer for each
video frame).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=606643
gst_qt_mux_can_renegotiate () gets called everywhere following
that pattern:
return gst_qt_mux_can_renegotiate (ref(self));
This means the reference must be released both in the success
and failure cases, it was only done in the success case.
Corrupted files could potentially have multiple cdat/cdt2 atoms in
a sample entry, which is unclear how to handle.
Ignore repeated ones.
CID #1434162
CID #1434159
The value stored in cenc_aux_sample_count wasn't in sync with the
parsing code that followed which checks whether all entries are
valid and present.
Only write the actual sample count when we know for sure.
CID #1427087
The samples table is sorted by DTS, not PTS. As such we can only get the
correct result when using a binary search on it, if we search for the
DTS.
Also if we only ever search for the frame, where the following frame is
the first one with a PTS after the search position, we will generally
stop searching too early if frames are reordered.
In forwards playback this is not really a problem (after the decoder
reordered the frames, clipping is happening), in reverse playback
it means that we can output one or more frames too few as we stop too
early and the decoder would never receive it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782118
The smallest possible is 24 (and not 25) bytes.
The last "name" field can according to QTFF specifications not be present
at all. The parser will handle this fine and so will the rest of
the qtdemux code.
If codec_data is changed, the stream is no longer valid.
Rather than keeping running when refusing new caps,
this patch send a warning to the bus.
Also fix up splitmuxsink to ignore this warning while changing caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790000
It generally makes not much sense to configure it for all pads/traks at
once as this value is usually different for each of them. As such, add a
new property on the pads in addition to the existing property on the
whole muxer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792649
If we saw empty segments, we previously unconditionally pushed a
GAP event downstream regardless of the duration of that empty
segment.
In order to avoid issues with initial negotiation of downstream elements
(which would negotiate to something before receiving any data due to
that initial GAP event), check if there's at least a second of difference
(like we do for other GAP-related checks in qtdemux) before
deciding to push a GAP event downstream.
If a reserved-max-duration is set, we should always track
and update the reserved-duration-remaining estimate, even
if we're not sending periodic moov updates downstream for
full robust muxing.
It is possible that the mdat has more data than what was stored in the
headers file. If we put that to the output the file will have bogus data
at the end and some players will complain.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784258
qtdemux.c: In function ‘gst_qtdemux_configure_stream’:
qtdemux.c:7764:34: error: suggest parentheses around ‘&&’ within ‘||’ [-Werror=parentheses]
if ((stream->n_samples == 1) && (stream->first_duration == 0)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Avoid computing frame rate when a stream contain moof with only one
sample, to avoid an assert. The moof is considered as still picture.
The same is already done for one sample given in the moov.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782217
... which no longer worked due to unconditionally clearing sample info and
ending up in inconsistent state. Let's tread a bit more carefully and also
allow for the old seek handling that resorts to scanning if no mfra info
is available.
The last entry will most likely get new samples added to it in "robust"
muxing mode, changing the samples_per_chunk and thus making it wrong to
keep the last two entries merged. It will run into an assertion later
when adding a new sample to the chunk.
Thanks to gdiener@cardinalpeak.com for the analysis of the bug and
proposal for a solution.
Timecode trak is only supported for mov right now, not for mp4. That
code would otherwise create an invalid trak if the muxed video contained
timecode metadata.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782684
We only accept new caps if they are basically the same. We don't want to
reset anything as if the caps are new, otherwise various state could get
out of sync with the current run.
We have some padding added after the initial moov, so a bigger updated
moov can be handled to some degree and is expected. Previously we just
ignored the padding and errored out in cases when the padding would've
just been enough.
This sets up a moov with the correct sample positions beforehand and
only works with constant framerate, I-frame only streams.
Currently only support for ProRes and raw audio is implemented but
adding new codecs is just a matter of defining appropriate maximum frame
sizes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781447
When muxing raw audio, we have no way of storing timestamps but are just
storing a continuous stream of audio samples. If the difference between
the expected and the real timestamp becomes to big, we should error out
instead of silently creating files with wrong A/V sync.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780679