third_party_ffmpeg/libavcodec/vc2enc_dwt.c

284 lines
10 KiB
C
Raw Normal View History

avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
/*
* Copyright (C) 2007 Marco Gerards <marco@gnu.org>
* Copyright (C) 2016 Open Broadcast Systems Ltd.
* Author 2016 Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
*
* This file is part of FFmpeg.
*
* FFmpeg is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* FFmpeg is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
* Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with FFmpeg; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
*/
#include "libavutil/attributes.h"
#include "libavutil/mem.h"
#include "vc2enc_dwt.h"
/* Since the transforms spit out interleaved coefficients, this function
* rearranges the coefficients into the more traditional subdivision,
* making it easier to encode and perform another level. */
static av_always_inline void deinterleave(dwtcoef *linell, ptrdiff_t stride,
int width, int height, dwtcoef *synthl)
{
int x, y;
ptrdiff_t synthw = width << 1;
dwtcoef *linehl = linell + width;
dwtcoef *linelh = linell + height*stride;
dwtcoef *linehh = linelh + width;
/* Deinterleave the coefficients. */
for (y = 0; y < height; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < width; x++) {
linell[x] = synthl[(x << 1)];
linehl[x] = synthl[(x << 1) + 1];
linelh[x] = synthl[(x << 1) + synthw];
linehh[x] = synthl[(x << 1) + synthw + 1];
}
synthl += synthw << 1;
linell += stride;
linelh += stride;
linehl += stride;
linehh += stride;
}
}
static void vc2_subband_dwt_97(VC2TransformContext *t, dwtcoef *data,
ptrdiff_t stride, int width, int height)
{
int x, y;
dwtcoef *datal = data, *synth = t->buffer, *synthl = synth;
const ptrdiff_t synth_width = width << 1;
const ptrdiff_t synth_height = height << 1;
/*
* Shift in one bit that is used for additional precision and copy
* the data to the buffer.
*/
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] = datal[x] * 2;
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
synthl += synth_width;
datal += stride;
}
/* Horizontal synthesis. */
synthl = synth;
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y++) {
/* Lifting stage 2. */
synthl[1] -= (8*synthl[0] + 9*synthl[2] - synthl[4] + 8) >> 4;
for (x = 1; x < width - 2; x++)
synthl[2*x + 1] -= (9*synthl[2*x] + 9*synthl[2*x + 2] - synthl[2*x + 4] -
synthl[2 * x - 2] + 8) >> 4;
synthl[synth_width - 1] -= (17*synthl[synth_width - 2] -
synthl[synth_width - 4] + 8) >> 4;
synthl[synth_width - 3] -= (8*synthl[synth_width - 2] +
9*synthl[synth_width - 4] -
synthl[synth_width - 6] + 8) >> 4;
/* Lifting stage 1. */
synthl[0] += (synthl[1] + synthl[1] + 2) >> 2;
for (x = 1; x < width - 1; x++)
synthl[2*x] += (synthl[2*x - 1] + synthl[2*x + 1] + 2) >> 2;
synthl[synth_width - 2] += (synthl[synth_width - 3] +
synthl[synth_width - 1] + 2) >> 2;
synthl += synth_width;
}
/* Vertical synthesis: Lifting stage 2. */
synthl = synth + synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] -= (8*synthl[x - synth_width] + 9*synthl[x + synth_width] -
synthl[x + 3 * synth_width] + 8) >> 4;
synthl = synth + (synth_width << 1);
for (y = 1; y < height - 2; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x + synth_width] -= (9*synthl[x] +
9*synthl[x + 2 * synth_width] -
synthl[x - 2 * synth_width] -
synthl[x + 4 * synth_width] + 8) >> 4;
synthl += synth_width << 1;
}
synthl = synth + (synth_height - 1) * synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++) {
synthl[x] -= (17*synthl[x - synth_width] -
synthl[x - 3*synth_width] + 8) >> 4;
synthl[x - 2*synth_width] -= (9*synthl[x - 3*synth_width] +
8*synthl[x - 1*synth_width] - synthl[x - 5*synth_width] + 8) >> 4;
}
/* Vertical synthesis: Lifting stage 1. */
synthl = synth;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (synthl[x + synth_width] + synthl[x + synth_width] + 2) >> 2;
synthl = synth + (synth_width << 1);
for (y = 1; y < height - 1; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (synthl[x - synth_width] + synthl[x + synth_width] + 2) >> 2;
synthl += synth_width << 1;
}
synthl = synth + (synth_height - 2) * synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (synthl[x - synth_width] + synthl[x + synth_width] + 2) >> 2;
deinterleave(data, stride, width, height, synth);
}
static void vc2_subband_dwt_53(VC2TransformContext *t, dwtcoef *data,
ptrdiff_t stride, int width, int height)
{
int x, y;
dwtcoef *synth = t->buffer, *synthl = synth, *datal = data;
const ptrdiff_t synth_width = width << 1;
const ptrdiff_t synth_height = height << 1;
/*
* Shift in one bit that is used for additional precision and copy
* the data to the buffer.
*/
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] = datal[x] << 1;
synthl += synth_width;
datal += stride;
}
/* Horizontal synthesis. */
synthl = synth;
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y++) {
/* Lifting stage 2. */
for (x = 0; x < width - 1; x++)
synthl[2 * x + 1] -= (synthl[2 * x] + synthl[2 * x + 2] + 1) >> 1;
synthl[synth_width - 1] -= (2*synthl[synth_width - 2] + 1) >> 1;
/* Lifting stage 1. */
synthl[0] += (2*synthl[1] + 2) >> 2;
for (x = 1; x < width - 1; x++)
synthl[2 * x] += (synthl[2 * x - 1] + synthl[2 * x + 1] + 2) >> 2;
synthl[synth_width - 2] += (synthl[synth_width - 3] + synthl[synth_width - 1] + 2) >> 2;
synthl += synth_width;
}
/* Vertical synthesis: Lifting stage 2. */
synthl = synth + synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] -= (synthl[x - synth_width] + synthl[x + synth_width] + 1) >> 1;
synthl = synth + (synth_width << 1);
for (y = 1; y < height - 1; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x + synth_width] -= (synthl[x] + synthl[x + synth_width * 2] + 1) >> 1;
synthl += (synth_width << 1);
}
synthl = synth + (synth_height - 1) * synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] -= (2*synthl[x - synth_width] + 1) >> 1;
/* Vertical synthesis: Lifting stage 1. */
synthl = synth;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (2*synthl[synth_width + x] + 2) >> 2;
synthl = synth + (synth_width << 1);
for (y = 1; y < height - 1; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (synthl[x + synth_width] + synthl[x - synth_width] + 2) >> 2;
synthl += (synth_width << 1);
}
synthl = synth + (synth_height - 2)*synth_width;
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++)
synthl[x] += (synthl[x - synth_width] + synthl[x + synth_width] + 2) >> 2;
deinterleave(data, stride, width, height, synth);
}
static av_always_inline void dwt_haar(VC2TransformContext *t, dwtcoef *data,
ptrdiff_t stride, int width, int height,
const int s)
{
int x, y;
dwtcoef *synth = t->buffer, *synthl = synth, *datal = data;
const ptrdiff_t synth_width = width << 1;
const ptrdiff_t synth_height = height << 1;
/* Horizontal synthesis. */
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y++) {
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x += 2) {
synthl[y*synth_width + x + 1] = (datal[y*stride + x + 1] << s) -
(datal[y*stride + x] << s);
synthl[y*synth_width + x] = (datal[y*stride + x + 0] << s) +
((synthl[y*synth_width + x + 1] + 1) >> 1);
}
}
/* Vertical synthesis. */
for (x = 0; x < synth_width; x++) {
for (y = 0; y < synth_height; y += 2) {
synthl[(y + 1)*synth_width + x] = synthl[(y + 1)*synth_width + x] -
synthl[y*synth_width + x];
synthl[y*synth_width + x] = synthl[y*synth_width + x] +
((synthl[(y + 1)*synth_width + x] + 1) >> 1);
}
}
deinterleave(data, stride, width, height, synth);
}
static void vc2_subband_dwt_haar(VC2TransformContext *t, dwtcoef *data,
ptrdiff_t stride, int width, int height)
{
dwt_haar(t, data, stride, width, height, 0);
}
static void vc2_subband_dwt_haar_shift(VC2TransformContext *t, dwtcoef *data,
ptrdiff_t stride, int width, int height)
{
dwt_haar(t, data, stride, width, height, 1);
}
av_cold int ff_vc2enc_init_transforms(VC2TransformContext *s, int p_stride,
int p_height, int slice_w, int slice_h)
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
{
s->vc2_subband_dwt[VC2_TRANSFORM_9_7] = vc2_subband_dwt_97;
s->vc2_subband_dwt[VC2_TRANSFORM_5_3] = vc2_subband_dwt_53;
s->vc2_subband_dwt[VC2_TRANSFORM_HAAR] = vc2_subband_dwt_haar;
s->vc2_subband_dwt[VC2_TRANSFORM_HAAR_S] = vc2_subband_dwt_haar_shift;
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
/* Pad by the slice size, only matters for non-Haar wavelets */
s->buffer = av_calloc((p_stride + slice_w)*(p_height + slice_h), sizeof(dwtcoef));
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
if (!s->buffer)
return 1;
s->padding = (slice_h >> 1)*p_stride + (slice_w >> 1);
s->buffer += s->padding;
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
return 0;
}
av_cold void ff_vc2enc_free_transforms(VC2TransformContext *s)
{
if (s->buffer) {
av_free(s->buffer - s->padding);
s->buffer = NULL;
}
avcodec: add a native SMPTE VC-2 HQ encoder This commit adds a new encoder capable of creating BBC/SMPTE Dirac/VC-2 HQ profile files. Dirac is a wavelet based codec created by the BBC a little more than 10 years ago. Since then, wavelets have mostly gone out of style as they did not provide adequate encoding gains at lower bitrates. Dirac was a fully featured video codec equipped with perceptual masking, support for most popular pixel formats, interlacing, overlapped-block motion compensation, and other features. It found new life after being stripped of various features and standardized as the VC-2 codec by the SMPTE with an extra profile, the HQ profile that this encoder supports, added. The HQ profile was based off of the Low-Delay profile previously existing in Dirac. The profile forbids DC prediction and arithmetic coding to focus on high performance and low delay at higher bitrates. The standard bitrates for this profile vary but generally 1:4 compression is expected (~525 Mbps vs the 2200 Mbps for uncompressed 1080p50). The codec only supports I-frames, hence the high bitrates. The structure of this encoder is simple: do a DWT transform on the entire image, split it into multiple slices (specified by the user) and encode them in parallel. All of the slices are of the same size, making rate control and threading very trivial. Although only in C, this encoder is capable of 30 frames per second on an 4 core 8 threads Ivy Bridge. A lookup table is used to encode most of the coefficients. No code was used from the GSoC encoder from 2007 except for the 2 transform functions in diracenc_transforms.c. All other code was written from scratch. This encoder outperforms any other encoders in quality, usability and in features. Other existing implementations do not support 4 level transforms or 64x64 blocks (slices), which greatly increase compression. As previously said, the codec is meant for broadcasting, hence support for non-broadcasting image widths, heights, bit depths, aspect ratios, etc. are limited by the "level". Although this codec supports a few chroma subsamplings (420, 422, 444), signalling those is generally outside the specifications of the level used (3) and the reference decoder will outright refuse to read any image with such a flag signalled (it only supports 1920x1080 yuv422p10). However, most implementations will happily read files with alternate dimensions, framerates and formats signalled. Therefore, in order to encode files other than 1080p50 yuv422p10le, you need to provide an "-strict -2" argument to the command line. The FFmpeg decoder will happily read any files made with non-standard parameters, dimensions and subsamplings, and so will other implementations. IMO this should be "-strict -1", but I'll leave that up for discussion. There are still plenty of stuff to implement, for instance 5 more wavelet transforms are still in the specs and supported by the decoder. The encoder can be lossless, given a high enough bitrate. Signed-off-by: Rostislav Pehlivanov <atomnuker@gmail.com>
2016-02-10 16:50:00 +00:00
}