+++ /dev/null
-#ifndef _TIMEBASE_H
-#define _TIMEBASE_H 1
-
-// Common timebase that allows us to represent one frame exactly in all the
-// relevant frame rates:
-//
-// Timebase: 1/120000
-// Frame at 50fps: 2400/120000
-// Frame at 60fps: 2000/120000
-// Frame at 59.94fps: 2002/120000
-// Frame at 23.976fps: 5005/120000
-//
-// If we also wanted to represent one sample at 48000 Hz, we'd need
-// to go to 300000. Also supporting one sample at 44100 Hz would mean
-// going to 44100000; probably a bit excessive.
-#define TIMEBASE 120000
-
-// Some muxes, like MP4 (or at least avformat's implementation of it),
-// are not too fond of values above 2^31. At timebase 120000, that's only
-// about five hours or so, so we define a coarser timebase that doesn't
-// get 59.94 precisely (so there will be a marginal amount of pts jitter),
-// but can do at least 50 and 60 precisely, and months of streaming.
-#define COARSE_TIMEBASE 300
-
-#endif // !defined(_TIMEBASE_H)