The NSV demuxer assumes that a video frame's timestamp increases by one on each

frame, but some low-bitrate NSV files omit video frames for some NSV frames,
and expect the timestamp to increase by one every NSV frame. This is noticeable
in 64vp3.nsv where the video runs several times faster than the audio. Fix this
by unconditionally incrementing the video's timestamp with each NSV frame.
patch by David Conrad, umovimus gmail com

Originally committed as revision 8466 to svn://svn.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg/trunk
This commit is contained in:
David Conrad 2007-03-21 11:05:35 +00:00 committed by Diego Biurrun
parent df7625ed62
commit 8076609a40

View File

@ -602,13 +602,15 @@ null_chunk_retry:
pkt = &nsv->ahead[NSV_ST_VIDEO];
av_get_packet(pb, pkt, vsize);
pkt->stream_index = st[NSV_ST_VIDEO]->index;//NSV_ST_VIDEO;
pkt->dts = nst->frame_offset++;
pkt->dts = nst->frame_offset;
pkt->flags |= nsv->state == NSV_HAS_READ_NSVS ? PKT_FLAG_KEY : 0; /* keyframe only likely on a sync frame */
/*
for (i = 0; i < MIN(8, vsize); i++)
PRINT(("NSV video: [%d] = %02x\n", i, pkt->data[i]));
*/
}
((NSVStream*)st[NSV_ST_VIDEO]->priv_data)->frame_offset++;
if (asize/*st[NSV_ST_AUDIO]*/) {
nst = st[NSV_ST_AUDIO]->priv_data;
pkt = &nsv->ahead[NSV_ST_AUDIO];