Refactor the filter setup. Add two new filters with shelf characteristics for
first and last band. Change gain calculation as recommended in the quoted
document (no qrt needed). Rename variables to match the formulas in the
document.
No need to maintain our own genre table in qtdemux. The genres are
identical to the ID3 genres, so we can just use libgsttag's
gst_tag_id3_genre_get() to look them up.
The performance category is meant to be used to audit codepaths that lead to bad
performance (e.g. copies, conversion that can be avoided).
Remove the event category which is not used.
For vbr audio streams we need to use the number of blocks to calculate the
timestamps.
When the allocation of additional index memory fails, don't throw away what
we had before.
Various cleanups.
Implement scanning of the file when we can parse the index.
Some refactoring of common code.
Cleanups and comments.
Remove some reimplemented code.
Remove index massage code and put a FIXME where we should do something
equivalent later.
Remove some duplicate counters.
Be smarter when updateing the current the timestamp and offset in the stream
because we can reuse previously calculated values when simply go forward one
step.
Correctly set metadata on outgoing buffers.
Add a new function and datastructure to parse and hold the index entries on a
per stream base. Also avoid doing too much work trying to figure out the
timestamps and durations as we can trivially do that later.
Less information in the entries makes them 2 times smaller and not doing too
much work makes this code about 12 times faster than the regular case.
Hook in the new function alongside the existing function for comparison until
the rest of the code is updated to handle the new index datastructure.
For calculating the durations of each sample, we are supposed to add each
duration modulo 1<<32 so make the elapsed time counter a uint32.
Fixes#595942
If it looks like we would be allocating a silly size for our sample
index, just bail out instead of trying to allocate it. Helps with
broken or fuzzed files where we might end up trying to malloc a
couple of hundred MBs otherwise.