When variable framerate is disabled in libx264 (which occurs when using
the zerolatency tuning), libx264 ignores timestamps but still uses the
timebase leading to messed up rate control with our nanosecond timebase.
We work around this issue by setting the timebase to the reciprocal of
the framerate and we validate that the framerate is suitable.
This has been fixed upstream in libx264 but there are non-fixed versions
in the wild so this workaround is still needed.
Fixes bug #632861
Position queries are badly handled for DVDs (probably due to the division in
chapters): the time returned was the time since the start of chapter.
Now ask upstream for position queries, fall back to the old code if upstream
cannot answer the query.
This .pc file will not be installed, it's only for uninstalled setups,
same thing as we do for -good. This is so other modules' unit tests can
find our plugins properly in an uninstalled setup.
Only error out when downstream returns:
* NOT_SUPPORTED
* ERROR
* NOT_NEGOTIATED
* NOT_LINKED
If we got _UNEXPECTED, we push an EOS downstream (since maybe only one
of the streams had gone EOS) and then stop the task silently.
In the case of WRONG_STATE we just need to stop silently
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=600412
In X264_BUILD >= 78, b-pyramid became a non-boolean so passing a boolean
argument to the option string value causes an error. For < 78 we pass the
boolean value, for >= 78 we use the x264_b_pyramid_names[] array which will
result in passing 'none' for false and 'strict' for true. Other modes can be
set through the option-string property for now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=626577
This first checks what is required for ISO C99 support and sets the relevant
compiler parameters and if no C99 compiler is found, it checks for a
C89 compiler. This enables us to check for and use C89/C99 functions
that gcc hides from us without the correct compiler parameters.
x264_encoder_encode() should be called with a NULL picture until at least
x264_encoder_delayed_frames() returns 0. This fixes what appeared to be a
regression in make check due to the recent change in defaults which enabled
b-frames and b-pyramid, both of which I believe increase the number of delayed
frames when encoding.