avformat/matroskaenc: Change signature of mkv_write_track()
Up until now, mkv_write_track() received the index of the stream whose
header data it is about to write as parameter; this index has until
recently been explicitly used to generate both TrackNumber and TrackUID.
But this is no longer so and as there is no reason why the function
for writing a single TrackEntry should even know the index of the
TrackEntry it is about to write, said index is replaced in the list of
function parameters by the corresponding AVStream and mkv_track.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avformat/matroskaenc: Automatically use right TrackNumber in Cues
mkv_cuepoint (the structure used to store the index entries in the
Matroska muxer) currently contains fields for both the index of the
packet's stream in the AVFormatContext.streams array and for the
Matroska TrackNumber; correspondingly, mkv_add_cuepoint() has parameters
for both. But these two numbers can't be chosen independently, so get
rid of the TrackNumber.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avformat/matroskaenc: Ignore AttachedFiles for track limit
Attachments are streams in FFmpeg, but they are not tracks in Matroska.
Yet they were counted when checking a limit for the number of tracks that
the Matroska muxer imposes. This is unnecessary and has been changed.
Also use unsigned variables for the variables denoting TrackNumbers as
negative TrackNumbers are impossible.
(The Matroska file format actually has practically no limit on the
number of tracks and this is purely what our muxer supports. But even if
this limit were removed/relaxed in the future, it still makes sense to
use small TrackNumbers as this patch does, because greater numbers need
more bytes to encode.)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avformat/matroskaenc: Make output more deterministic
Using random values for TrackUID and FileUID (as happens when the
AVFMT_FLAG_BITEXACT flag is not set) has the obvious downside of making
the output indeterministic. This commit mitigates this by writing the
potentially random values with a fixed size of eight byte, even if their
actual values would fit into less than eight bytes. This ensures that
even in non-bitexact mode, the differences between two files generated
with the same settings are restricted to a few bytes in the header.
(Namely the SegmentUID, the TrackUIDs (in Tracks as well as when
referencing them via TagTrackUID), the FileUIDs (in Attachments as
well as in TagAttachmentUID) as well as the CRC-32 checksums of the
Info, Tracks, Attachments and Tags level-1-elements.) Without this
patch, there might be an offset/a size difference between two such
files.
The FATE-tests had to be updated because the fixed-sized UIDs are also
used in bitexact mode.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avformat/matroskaenc: Remove allocations for Attachments
If there are Attachments to write, the Matroska muxer currently
allocates two objects: An array that contains an entry for each
AttachedFile containing just the stream index of the corresponding
stream and the FileUID used for this AttachedFile; and a structure with
a pointer to said array and a counter for said array. These uids are
generated via code special to Attachments: It uses an AVLFG in the
normal and a sha of the attachment data in the bitexact case. (Said sha
requires an allocation, too.)
But now that an uid is generated for each stream in mkv_init(), there is
no need any more to use special code for generating the FileUIDs of
AttachedFiles: One can simply use the uid already generated for the
corresponding stream. And this makes the whole allocations of the
structures for AttachedFiles as well as the structures itself superfluous.
They have been removed.
In case AVFMT_FLAG_BITEXACT is set, the uids will be different from the
old ones which is the reason why the FATE-test lavf-mkv_attachment
needed to be updated. The old method had the drawback that two
AttachedFiles with the same data would have the same FileUID.
The new one doesn't.
Also notice that the dynamic buffer used to write the Attachments leaks
if an error happens when writing the buffer. By removing the
allocations potential sources of errors have been removed.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
This commit reuses the random seed generated in mkv_init() (to determine
the TrackUIDs) for the SegmentUID in order to avoid a potentially
expensive call to av_get_random_seed().
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Up until now, the TrackUID of a Matroska track which is supposed to be
random was not random at all: It always coincided with the TrackNumber
which is usually the 1-based index of the corresponding stream in the
array of AVStreams. This has been changed: It is now set via an AVLFG
if AVFMT_FLAG_BITEXACT is not set. Otherwise it is set like it is set
now (the only change happens if an explicit track number has been
chosen via dash_track_number, because the system used in the normal
situation is now used, too). In particular, no FATE tests need to be
updated.
This also fixes a bug in case the dash_track_number option was used:
In this case the TrackUID was set to the provided number, but the tags
were written with a TagTrackUID simply based upon the index, so that
the tags didn't apply to the track they ought to apply to.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Tags in the Matroska file format can be summarized as follows: There is
a level 1-element called Tags containing one or many Tag elements each
of which in turn contain a Targets element and one or many SimpleTags.
Each SimpleTag roughly corresponds to a single key-value pair similar to
an AVDictionaryEntry. The Targets meanwhile contains information to what
the metadata contained in the SimpleTags contained in the containing Tag
applies (i.e. to the file as a whole or to an individual track).
The Matroska muxer writes such metadata. It puts the metadata of every
stream into a Tag whose Targets makes it point to the corresponding
track. And if the output is seekable, then it also adds another Tag for
each track whose Targets corresponds to the track and where it reserves
space in a SimpleTag to write the duration at the end of the muxing
process into.
Yet there is no reason to write two Tag elements for a track and a few
bytes (typically 24 bytes per track) can be saved by adding the duration
SimpleTag to the other Tag of the same track (if it exists).
FATE has been updated because the output files changed. (Tests that
write to unseekable output (pipes) needn't be updated (no duration tag
has ever been written for them) and the same applies to tests without
further metadata.)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avformat/matroskaenc: Ensure that ChapterUID are != 0
AVChapters have an int as id field and therefore this value can appear
<= 0. When remuxing from Matroska, this value actually contains
the lower 32 bits of the original ChapterUID (which can be 64 bits).
In order to ensure that the ChapterUID is always > 0, they were offset
as follows (since 07704c61): First max(0, 1LL - chapter[i].id) was computed
and stored in an uint32_t. And then the IDs were offset using this value.
This has two downsides:
1. It does not ensure that the UID is actually != 0: Namely if there is
a chapter with id == INT_MIN, then the offset will be 2^31 + 1 and a
chapter with id == INT_MAX will become 2^31 - 1 + 2^31 + 1 = 2^32 = 0,
because the actual calculation was performed in 32 bits.
2. As soon as a chapter id appears to be negative, a nontrivial offset
is used, so that not even a ChapterUID that only uses 32 bits is
preserved.
So change this by treating the id as an unsigned value internally and
only offset (by 1) if an id vanishes. The actual offsetting then has to
be performed in 64 bits in order to make sure that no UINT32_MAX wraps
around.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avcodec/cbs: Avoid leaving the ... out in calls to variadic macros
According to C99, there has to be at least one argument for every ...
in a variadic function-like macro. In practice most (all?) compilers also
allow to leave it completely out, but it is nevertheless required: In a
variadic macro "there shall be more arguments in the invocation than there
are parameters in the macro definition (excluding the ...)." (C99,
6.10.3.4).
CBS (not the framework itself, but the macros used in the
cbs_*_syntax_template.c files) relies on the compiler allowing to leave
a variadic macro argument out. This leads to warnings when compiling in
-pedantic mode, e.g. "warning: must specify at least one argument for
'...' parameter of variadic macro [-Wgnu-zero-variadic-macro-arguments]"
from Clang.
Most of these warnings can be easily avoided: The syntax_templates
mostly contain helper macros that expand to more complex variadic macros
and these helper macros often omit an argument for the .... Modifying
them to always expand to complex macros with an empty argument for the
... at the end fixes most of these warnings: The number of warnings went
down from 400 to 0 for cbs_av1, from 1114 to 32 for cbs_h2645, from 38 to
0 for cbs_jpeg, from 166 to 0 for cbs_mpeg2 and from 110 to 8 for cbs_vp9.
These eight remaining warnings for cbs_vp9 have been fixed by switching
to another macro in cbs_vp9_syntax_template: The fixed values for the
sync bytes as well as the trailing bits for byte-alignment are now read
via the fixed() macro (this also adds a check to ensure that trailing
bits are indeed zero as they have to be).
Reviewed-by: Mark Thompson <sw@jkqxz.net> Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avcodec/dpcm: clip exponent into supported range in XAN DPCM
Fixes: shift exponent 32 is too large for 32-bit type 'int' Fixes: 21200/clusterfuzz-testcase-minimized-ffmpeg_AV_CODEC_ID_XAN_DPCM_fuzzer-5754704894361600 Found-by: continuous fuzzing process https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/tree/master/projects/ffmpeg Reviewed-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net> Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
The calculation of precinct boundaries has been
fixed. The precinct boundaries were calculated
as an offset to the band boundary, but must
instead be calculated as an offset from the
reslevel. This patch fixes #4669 and #4679.
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This patch fixes an error where the COC marker
overrides all data of the SPcod field of the
COD marker. It must override only one bit of
SPcod field. This now allows p0_08.j2k to be
decoded correctly (mentioned in #4679).
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc>
This is required to use it as an AVCodec.supported_samplerates array.
Adding the sentinel has been forgotten in 4679a474.
Without it e.g. the FATE-test ffmpeg-filter_complex_audio fails with ASAN.
Reviewed-by: Carl Eugen Hoyos <ceffmpeg@gmail.com> Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
avcodec/aacdec: fix compilation under soft float MIPS
Place HAVE_MIPSFPU further up so that functions that use floating point
ASM are defined away. Otherwise compilation failures result when soft
float in enabled on the toolchain.
lavf/oggparsevorbis: Use case-insensitive key compare for vorbis picture
Regression since 8d3630c5402fdda2889fe4f74f7dcdd50ebca654 where keys were changed
to not be touppered but the picture block strcmp was not changed to be case-insensitive.
Font sizes are relative to the subtitle frame dimensions. If the
expected frame dimensions are not known, the font sizes will most
likely be incorrect.
Signed-off-by: Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>
Anton Khirnov [Fri, 19 May 2017 08:44:59 +0000 (10:44 +0200)]
h264_sei: parse the picture timing SEIs correctly
Those SEIs refer to the currently active SPS. However, since the SEI
NALUs precede the coded picture data in the bitstream, the active SPS is
in general not known when we are decoding the SEI.
Therefore, store the content of the picture timing SEIs and actually
parse it when the active SPS is known.
Anton Khirnov [Sat, 5 Aug 2017 16:36:12 +0000 (18:36 +0200)]
h264dec: do not abort if decoding extradata fails
Such errors are not necessarily fatal and decoding might still be
possible, e.g. it happens for MVC streams where we do not handle the
subset SPS thus failing to parse its corresponding PPS.
Anton Khirnov [Tue, 17 Jan 2017 15:28:30 +0000 (16:28 +0100)]
lavc: do not implicitly share the frame pool between threads
Currently the frame pool used by the default get_buffer2()
implementation is a single struct, allocated when opening the decoder.
A pointer to it is simply copied to each frame thread and we assume that
no thread attempts to modify it at an unexpected time. This is rather
fragile and potentially dangerous.
With this commit, the frame pool is made refcounted, with the reference
being propagated across threads along with other context variables. The
frame pool is now also immutable - when the stream parameters change we
drop the old reference and create a new one.
Anton Khirnov [Mon, 9 Jan 2017 17:04:42 +0000 (18:04 +0100)]
pthread_frame: merge the functionality for normal decoder init and init_thread_copy
The current design, where
- proper init is called for the first per-thread context
- first thread's private data is copied into private data for all the
other threads
- a "fixup" function is called for all the other threads to e.g.
allocate dynamically allocated data
is very fragile and hard to follow, so it is abandoned. Instead, the
same init function is used to init each per-thread context. Where
necessary, AVCodecInternal.is_copy can be used to differentiate between
the first thread and the other ones (e.g. for decoding the extradata
just once).
subtitles.h has been included in order to use ff_subtitles_next_line()
to help parsing srt subtitles which at that time had their timing as
part of the payload and not as part of the AVPacket fields. When this
changed (in 55180b32) it has been forgotten to remove this header.
libavcodec/internal.h meanwhile has been added in bb47aa5850c and has
never been used at all.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>