This is recommended by various specifications for such framerates, while
for integer framerates we continue using centiframes to allow for some
more accuracy.
Using N means that no rounding error accumulates, eventually leading to
outputting a packet with a different duration.
Some tools such as MediaInfo determine that a stream is variable
framerate if any packet has a different duration than the others, and
there is no reason I can see for not using the full 4 bytes of
resolution that the mp4 timescale offers.
Example problematic pipeline:
```
videotestsrc num-buffers=5001 ! video/x-raw,framerate=60000/1001,width=320,height=240 ! \
videoconvert ! x264enc bitrate=80000 speed-preset=1 tune=zerolatency ! h264parse ! \
video/x-h264,profile=high-10 ! mp4mux ! filesink location="result2.mp4"
```
This results in a media file that MediaInfo detects as variable
framerate because the 5000th packet has duration 99 instead of 100.
With this patch, the timescale is 60000 and all packets have duration
1001.
Related issue for context: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769041
Co-authored-by: Sebastian Dröge <sebastian@centricular.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3049>
The only case where we definitely need to write a new trun is when the
data_offset value does not match the end of the list of entries.
Needing multiple trun atoms is required when interleaving multiple
streams together.
All other cases can be covered by adding more entries to the existing
trun atom.
Fixes playback of fragemented mp4 in ffplay and chrome.
Using e.g. mp4mux fragment-duration=1000 fragment-mode=dash-or-mss
and
mp4mux fragment-duration=1000 fragment-mode=first-moov-then-finalise
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3426>