Both are codec properties and not encoder capabilities. The relevant
AVCodecDescriptor.props flags exist for this purpose.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
ff_vaapi_encode_close() is not enough to free the resources like cbs
if initialization failure happens after codec->configure (except for
vp8/vp9).
We need to call avctx->codec->close() to deallocate, otherwise memory
leak happens.
Add FF_CODEC_CAP_INIT_CLEANUP for vaapi encoders and deallocate the
resources at free_and_end inside avcodec_open2().
Reviewed-by: Timo Rothenpieler <timo@rothenpieler.org>
Signed-off-by: Linjie Fu <linjie.fu@intel.com>
The compound literals assigned to "components"
only exist within the scope of the if/else
block (thanks Mark Thompson for the better
explanation).
Thus, after this if/else block, "components"
ends up pointing to an arbitrary/undefined
array. With some compilers and depending on
optimization settings, these arbitrary values
may end up being the same value (i.e. 0 with
GNU GCC 9.x). Unfortunately, the GNU GCC
compiler, at least, never prints any warnings
about this.
This patch fixes this issue by assigning the
constant arrays to local variables at function
scope and then pointing "components" to those
as necessary.
Fixes#7915
Signed-off-by: U. Artie Eoff <ullysses.a.eoff@intel.com>
Doesn't change anything, but makes the behaviour better match that of the
other codecs (the CONSTANT_QUALITY_ONLY flag already ensures that CQP is
the only RC mode selectable for MJPEG).
Currently, a fragment's unit array is constantly reallocated during
splitting of a packet. This commit changes this: One can keep the units
array by distinguishing between the number of allocated and the number
of valid units in the units array.
The more units a packet is split into, the bigger the benefit.
So MPEG-2 benefits the most; for a video coming from an NTSC-DVD
(usually 32 units per frame) the average cost of cbs_insert_unit (for a
single unit) went down from 6717 decicycles to 450 decicycles (based
upon 10 runs with 4194304 runs each); if each packet consists of only
one unit, it went down from 2425 to 448; for a H.264 video where most
packets contain nine units, it went from 4431 to 450.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@googlemail.com>
This attaches the logic of picking the mode of for the next picture to
the output, which simplifies some choices by removing the concept of
the picture for which input is not yet available. At the same time,
we allow more complex reference structures and track more reference
metadata (particularly the contents of the DPB) for use in the
codec-specific code.
It also adds flags to explicitly track the available features of the
different codecs. The new structure also allows open-GOP support, so
that is now available for codecs which can do it.
Add a larger warning more clearly explaining the consequences of missing
packed header support in the driver. Also only write the extradata if the
user actually requests it via the GLOBAL_HEADER flag.
Choose what types of reference frames will be used based on what types
are available, and make the intra-only mode explicit (GOP size one,
which must be used for MJPEG).
Query which modes are supported and select between VBR and CBR based
on that - this removes all of the codec-specific rate control mode
selection code.
Previously there was one fixed choice for each codec (e.g. H.265 -> Main
profile), and using anything else then required an explicit option from
the user. This changes to selecting the profile based on the input format
and the set of profiles actually supported by the driver (e.g. P010 input
will choose Main 10 profile for H.265 if the driver supports it).
The entrypoint and render target format are also chosen dynamically in the
same way, removing those explicit selections from the per-codec code.
Explicitly identify decoder/encoder wrappers with a common name. This
saves API users from guessing by the name suffix. For example, they
don't have to guess that "h264_qsv" is the h264 QSV implementation, and
instead they can just check the AVCodec .codec and .wrapper_name fields.
Explicitly mark AVCodec entries that are hardware decoders or most
likely hardware decoders with new AV_CODEC_CAPs. The purpose is allowing
API users listing hardware decoders in a more generic way. The proposed
AVCodecHWConfig does not provide this information fully, because it's
concerned with decoder configuration, not information about the fact
whether the hardware is used or not.
AV_CODEC_CAP_HYBRID exists specifically for QSV, which can have software
implementations in case the hardware is not capable.
Based on a patch by Philip Langdale <philipl@overt.org>.
Merges Libav commit 47687a2f8a.
This allows better checking of capabilities and will make it easier
to add more functionality later.
It also commonises some duplicated code around rate control setup
and adds more comments explaining the internals.
(cherry picked from commit 80a5d05108)
This allows better checking of capabilities and will make it easier
to add more functionality later.
It also commonises some duplicated code around rate control setup
and adds more comments explaining the internals.
These are all trivial to merge.
* commit '92fdea37477b5a2d1329e5ef0773e24473fa8f12':
vaapi_h265: Add -qp option, use it to replace use of -global_quality
vaapi_h265: Add constant-bitrate encode support
vaapi_h264: Add encode quality option (for quality-speed tradeoff)
vaapi_h264: Add -qp option, use it to replace use of -global_quality
vaapi_encode: Add support for codec-local options
vaapi_h264: Add constant-bitrate encode support
vaapi_encode: Refactor slightly to allow easier setting of global options
Merged-by: Derek Buitenhuis <derek.buitenhuis@gmail.com>