This allows for padding/trimming at the start of stream. By default, no
assumption is made about the first frame's expected pts, so no padding or
trimming is done.
According to its description, it is supposed to be the LCM of all the
frame durations. The usability of such a thing is vanishingly small,
especially since we cannot determine it with any amount of reliability.
Therefore get rid of it after the next bump.
Replace it with the average framerate where it makes sense.
FATE results for the wtv and xmv demux tests change. In the wtv case
this is caused by the file being corrupted (or possibly badly cut) and
containing invalid timestamps. This results in lavf estimating the
framerate wrong and making up wrong frame durations.
In the xmv case the file contains pts jumps, so again the estimated
framerate is far from anything sane and lavf again makes up different
frame durations.
In some other tests lavf starts making up frame durations from different
frame.
AVPacket.duration is mostly made up and thus completely useless, this is
especially true for video streams.
Therefore use dts difference for framerate estimation and
the max_analyze_duration check.
The asyncts test now needs -analyzeduration, because the default is 5
seconds and the audio stream in the sample appears at ~10 seconds.
Useful in cases where a significant analyzeduration is
still needed, while minimizing buffering before output.
An example is processing low-latency streams where all
media types won't necessarily come in if the
analyzeduration is small.
Additional changes by Josh Allmann <joshua.allmann@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
MMX-enabled systems by default use some dsputil functions differing
from the C versions. Adding these flags ensures accurate ones are
used everywhere.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
This allows us to unconditionally set the cglobal num_args
parameter to a bigger value, thus making writing yasm code
even easier than before.
Signed-off-by: Ronald S. Bultje <rsbultje@gmail.com>
Without this, cglobal will expand "z" to "zh" to access the high byte
in a register's word, which causes a name collision with the ZH(x) macro
further up in this file.
This fixes out of array writes
Found-by: Mateusz "j00ru" Jurczyk and Gynvael Coldwind
Signed-off-by: Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>
Signed-off-by: Kostya Shishkov <kostya.shishkov@gmail.com>
This allows non-standard replacements for the -c compiler flag.
Some compilers use other flags or no flag at all in place of
the usual one.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
This allows using non-standard flags for running the C preprocessor.
The -o flag must be included in this setting due to strange syntax
required by some compilers.
Set the correct flags for tms470.
Signed-off-by: Mans Rullgard <mans@mansr.com>
Previously, we returned any error code except AVERROR_EOF to the
caller - only if AVERROR_EOF or 0 was returned, we proceeded to
the next segment.
With some setups of web servers, using Connection: close in https
and GnuTLS, we don't get a clean error code at the end of segments.
In those cases, just proceed to the next segment.
Tested-by: Antti Seppälä <a.seppala@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>
OpenSSL returns 0 when the peer has closed the connection. GnuTLS
doesn't return that though, but returns
GNUTLS_E_UNEXPECTED_PACKET_LENGTH if the connection simply is closed
without a clean close notify packet.
Tested-by: Antti Seppälä <a.seppala@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>