This code was written when the allocation functions used parameters of
type unsigned. This is no longer true today and therefore we only need
to check whether the multiplication of the array's size stays within
a size_t -- and this can be offloaded to av_realloc_array.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Up until now, the wav muxer used a reallocation of the form ptr =
av_realloc(ptr, size); that leaks upon error. Furthermore, if a
failed reallocation happened when writing the trailer, a segfault
would occur due to avio_write(NULL, size) because the muxer only
prints an error message upon allocation error, but does not return
the error.
Moreover setting the pointer to the buffer to NULL on error seems to
be done on purpose in order to record that an error has occured so that
outputting the peak values is no longer attempted. This behaviour has
been retained by simply disabling whether peak data should be written
if an error occurs.
Finally, the reallocation is now done once per peak block and not once
per peak block per channel; it is also done with av_fast_realloc and not
with a linear size increase.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
AVID streams - currently handled by the AVRN decoder - can be (depending
on extradata contents) either MJPEG or raw video. To decode the MJPEG
variant, the AVRN decoder currently instantiates a MJPEG decoder
internally and forwards decoded frames to the caller (possibly after
cropping them).
This is suboptimal, because the AVRN decoder does not forward all the
features of the internal MJPEG decoder, such as direct rendering.
Handling such forwarding in a full and generic manner would be quite
hard, so it is simpler to just handle those streams in the MJPEG decoder
directly.
The AVRN decoder, which now handles only the raw streams, can now be
marked as supporting direct rendering.
This also removes the last remaining internal use of the obsolete
decoding API.
Commit 0d1229f1d2 factored the main part
of the voc demuxer's read_packet function out; yet when this Libav
commit was merged in f99195d56f, the
dependency of the other users of this function on vocdec.o was
unnecessarily kept. This commit fixes this.
While just at it, also disable the data only used by the voc demuxer
and muxer in voc.c if both of them are disabled.
Reviewed-by: Paul B Mahol <onemda@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
The options of the w64 demuxer are a proper subset of the options for
the wav demuxer, making it possible to reuse a part of the options for
the wav demuxer for the w64 demuxer.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
The NUT and avi demuxers only need ff_codec_movvideo_tags and so this
removes a dependency on the rest of isom.c as well as on mpeg4audio.c
(which isom depends on); it is similar for the Matroska demuxer and
muxers, except that the mpeg4audio.c dependency can't be avoided.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
This is a result of the mov channel parsing stuff being factored out
of mov.c twice: Once in 91b782720f
to isom.c and later in 3bab7cd128.
Also remove the isom.h header; and while just at it, remove an unused
mathematics.h inclusion.
(isom.c actually depends upon mpeg4audio from libavcodec for
avpriv_mpeg4audio_get_config2 and avpriv_mpa_freq_tab; yet there is
no configure dependency for iso_media which leads to failure of shared
builds.)
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Neither the feature, public fields, or AVOptions were ever truly deprecated,
nor will have been removed if this FF_API_ define was left in place, so
get rid of it as it's misleading.
Signed-off-by: James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>
The current behaviour ends up squaring the avg_frame_rate if the conter mode flag is set.
This messes up the timecode calculation, and looks to me as a regression that
seems to have been introduced 428b4aac.
Upon further testing is seems that no special case is need for having the counter flag set.
av_timecode_init appears to handles the timecode correctly, at least in the sample files
I have.
Here is a sample mov file with the counter flag set
https://www.dropbox.com/s/5l4fucb9lhq523s/timecode_counter_mode.mov
before the patch ffmpeg will report the timecode as:
00:37:11:97 and warns that the timecode framerate is 576000000/1002001
after patch:
14:50:55:02
Signed-off-by: Anton Khirnov <anton@khirnov.net>
This is the Matroska equivalent of D_WEBVTT_DESCRIPTIONS and is
therefore only enabled for subtitles.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
This is the equivalent of the WebM "D_WEBVTT/DESCRIPTIONS" and is
therefore only exported for subtitles.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Given that our disposition flags provide no way to distinguish the
cases of "track is unsuitable for hearing impaired users" and "it is
unknown whether the track is suitable for hearing impaired users" we do
not need to use a CountedElement for these flags.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Hint: Matroska actually provides a way to distinguish the cases of
"track is no commentary track" and "it is unknown whether the track
is a commentary track", but our disposition flags do not. Therefore
we need not use a CountedElement.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
For a very long time, the payload of integer and float elements had to
have a length > 0. Our parser treated such invalid elements as having a
value zero. But now it has been defined what an EBML element with length
zero means: It is a shorthand for the default value. This has also been
defined for strings (both ASCII and UTF-8). This commit modifies our
parser to support this.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
This has been done in order to find out whether this element is present
at all; but this can now be done in a cleaner way by using a CountedElement
for it.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
According to the new EBML specifications, a string element of length
zero would be read as the default value by a compliant parser.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
In the absence of an explicitly coded minimal luminance, the current
code inferred it to be -1, an invalid value. Yet it did not check the
value lateron at all, so that if a valid maximum luminance is
encountered, but no minimal luminance, an invalid minimal luminance of
-1 is exported. If an minimal luminance element with a negative value is
present, it is exported, too. This can be simply fixed by adding a check
for the value of the element.
Yet given that a minimal luminance of zero Cd/m² is legal and can be
coded with a length of zero, we must not use a fake default value to
find out whether the element is present or not. Therefore this patch
uses an explicit counter for it.
While just at it, also check for max_luminance > min_luminance.
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
Up until now, the generic EBML reader used by the Matroska demuxer did
not have the capability to record whether an element was actually
present or not; instead, in cases where it mattered one typically added
an invalid default value and checked whether the value is valid (in
which case it is guaranteed to be present). This worked pretty well so
far, yet the EBML specifications have evolved: It is now legal to use
zero-length elements for floats, ints, uints and strings (both ASCII and
UTF-8); the value of these elements is the default value of the element
(if it has one) or zero for scalar types and an empty string for
strings. Furthermore, having a default value does no longer imply that
the element may be presumed to be present (with its default value) if it
is absent; this is only true if the element is mandatory, too.
These rules are designed to allow size savings as follows: Consider the
newly added FlagOriginal: It being zero means the track is not in its
original language, it being one means it is. For backward compatibility
reasons, neither of the two values may be inferred automatically in the
absence of the element. But one can still save a byte when one wants to
write the element with a value of zero, as one can write the integer with
a length of zero: 0x55AE 80 instead of 0x55AE 81 00. In the former case,
a parser has to infer the value of the element to be zero (which is the
element's default value).
When encountering an element with length zero, our parser always infers
a value of zero (or an empty string); this is wrong for values with
a different default value. It needs to infer the default value (or zero
in its absence) and this precludes using an invalid default value for
elements like FlagOriginal. Ergo one needs to be able to record whether
an element is present or not by other means. This patch allows to use a
simple counter for this. While just at it, some invalid and unnecessary
default values have been removed (mastering metadata elements used
default values of -1.0, despite these elements only being used if they
are > 0).
Reviewed-by: Ridley Combs <rcombs@rcombs.me>
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>
The MPEG-PS muxer uses a custom queue of custom packets. To keep track
of it, it has a pointer (named predecode_packet) to the head of the
queue and a pointer to where the next packet is to be added (it points
to the next-pointer of the last element of the queue); furthermore,
there is also a pointer that points into the queue (called premux_packet).
The exact behaviour was as follows: If premux_packet was NULL when a
packet is received, it is taken to mean that the old queue is empty and
a new queue is started. premux_packet will point to the head of said
queue and the next_packet-pointer points to its next pointer. If
predecode_packet is NULL, it will also made to point to the newly
allocated element.
But if premux_packet is NULL and predecode_packet is not, then there
will be two queues with head elements premux_packet and
predecode_packet. Yet only elements reachable from predecode_packet are
ever freed, so the premux_packet queue leaks.
Worse yet, when the predecode_packet queue will be eventually exhausted,
predecode_packet will be made to point into the other queue and when
predecode_packet will be freed, the next pointer of the preceding
element of the queue will still point to the element just freed. This
element might very well be still reachable from premux_packet which
leads to use-after-frees lateron. This happened in the tickets mentioned
below.
Fix this by never creating two queues in the first place by checking for
predecode_packet to know whether the queue is empty. If premux_packet is
NULL, then it is set to the newly allocated element of the queue.
Fixes tickets #6887, #8188 and #8266.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@gmail.com>