Archive for the ‘NihAV’ Category

NihAV — A New Approach to Multimedia Pt. 5

Saturday, April 25th, 2015

Structures and functions

The problem with structures in libav* is that they are quite often contain a lot of useless information and easily break ABI when someone needs to add yet another crucial field like grandmother’s birthday. My idea to solve some of those problems was adding side data — something that is passed along the main data (e.g. packet) and decoders don’t have to care about it. It would be even better to make it more generic, so you don’t have to care about enums for that either. For instance, most of the codecs don’t have to care about broadcast grade metadata (but some containers and codecs like ATSC A/52 provide a lot of it) or stupid DVD shit (pan&scan anyone?). So if demuxer or decoder wants to provide it — fine, just don’t clutter existing structures with it, add it to metadata and if consumer (encoder/muxer/application) cares it can check whether such non-standard information is present and use it. That’s the general approach I want to have quite similar to FCC certification rule: producers (any code that outputs data) can have any kind of additional data but consumers (code that takes that data for input) do not have to care about it and can ignore it freely. It’s easy to add options marked as essential (like PNG chunks — they are self-marked that you can distinguish chunks that can be ignored from those that should be handled in any case) to ensure that this option won’t be ignored and input handler can error out on not understanding it.

As for proper function calls — Luca has described it quite well here (pity noone reads his blog).

NihAV — A New Approach to Multimedia Pt. 4

Friday, April 24th, 2015

On colourspaces and such

I think current situation with pixel formats is brain-damaged as well. You have a list of pixel formats longer than two arms and yet it’s insufficient for many use cases (e.g. Canopus HQX needs 12-bit YUVA422 but there’s no such format supported and thus 16-bit had to be used instead or ProRes with 8- or 16-bit alpha channel and 10-bit YUV). In this case it’s much better to have pixel format descriptor with all essential properties covered and all exotic stuff (e.g. Bayer to RGB conversion coefficients) in options. Why introduce a dozen IDs for packed raw formats when you can describe them in uniform way (i.e. read it as big/little-endian, use these shifts and masks to extract components etc.)? Even if you need to convert YUV with different subsampling for chroma planes (can happen in JPEG) into some special packed 10-bit RGB format you can simply pass those pixel format descriptors to the library and it will handle it despite encountering such formats for the first time.

P.S. I actually wrote some test code to demonstrate that idea but no-one got interested in it.

NihAV — A New Approach to Multimedia Pt. 3

Friday, April 24th, 2015

More on codecs handling

First of all, people are often AVI-centric and decide that you can always use 4-character code to identify a codec. Well, technically it’s true because there’s significantly less than 4 billion codecs in existence (I hope). The problem is uneven mapping — MPEG containers use integers for codec IDs, AVI uses 4-character code for video and 2-byte integer for audio, MOV uses 4-character code for both audio and video, Matroska uses long strings like V_MPEG4/MS/V3 etc etc. So in any case you have a problem of mapping codecs found by demuxers to internal decoders. In libavcodec it’s handled by having an insane enumeration of codec IDs and I’ve mentioned in part 2 that I’m not a fan of such approach.

So what I suggest instead? A global registry of codec names in string form. And splitting out media information database explicitly. After all, why not provide some codec information even if we cannot support it? Less effort when you add a new decoder and you can query some information about codec even if it’s not supported. Demuxer maps internal ID to codec name (if it can), codec database can be queried about that codec at any time to see what information is known about it and a decoder can be requested for that codec as well.

Here’s an example:

  1. Bink demuxer encounters KB2g;
  2. It reports binkvideo2 decoder;
  3. (optional) From database one can retrieve its name — “Bink Video 2”;
  4. A decoder for binkvideo2 is requested for it but that request is failed because noone has bothered to write such decoder;
  5. Or a decoder implemented by a special plugin that calls TotallyRADVideo.dll is called.

Just replace enum with string and you get better flexibility and only VideoLAN won’t like it.

NihAV — A New Approach to Multimedia Pt. 2

Thursday, April 23rd, 2015

Common design principles

I’d been participating in FFmpeg and then Libav development for about ten years and I’ve touched many parts of its codebase except for libavfilter and libavresample, so I know what I dislike in its design.

Enumerations. Maybe people like them but I think it’s much better to have list of string identifiers instead. You still specify codec or format or protocol by name in command line, why should code have that bulky and incompatible enumeration? It would be more convenient for library user to use string identifier — you try to find format handler for a given name and if you don’t have it or its support is disabled then no luck (of course VideoLAN prefers enums but that’s their problem).

Large pointless structures. AVCodecContext and AVFrame are good examples of that (especially the old versions). They lug around many members that are applicable only to very limited subset of video codecs and nothing else. A much better approach IMO would be to have substructures with minimal information needed for all audio/video/subtitle data (both in frame and context) and the rest is put into dictionary (maybe as subobjects, like motion information or rate control information structures).

API variations. Current approach is to shoehorn everything into specific structure. My opinion is that public functions should take as flexible (or simple) input as possible and do the same with output. For example, why have avcodec_decode_video2(), avcodec_decode_audio4() and avcodec_decode_subtitle2() if single function is enough? You feed input bytes and you obtain output bytes — no matter what you actually do (encode, decode, filter or pass through). Anything optional should be passed as optional — in a dictionary for example.

Various stuff. Parsing, probing, timestamp handling. All these things need to be reinvented because it’s hard to imagine them being much worse than they are or were a couple years ago.

I’d also like to have some small building blocks for codecs. In libavcodec many video decoders were forced to be built around MpegEncContext and noone likes that structure (except one guy who even named a video player after it but then again he doesn’t want to disclose his real name…). I prefer to have more independent decoders reusing the same methods somehow (e.g. this codec needs this frame management, this motion compensation). How to implement it, boost::codec::video::block_decoder templating and macros or function pointers for codec-specific functions (like block decoding) is yet to be conceived.

To be continued eventually…

NihAV — A New Approach to Multimedia Pt. 1

Thursday, April 23rd, 2015

Foreword or Why?!?!

There are two curses in program design (among many others) — legacy and monolithic design.

Legacy means two things: first, there is such thing ask backward compatibility that you (sometimes have to maintain) or the users will complain about broken APIs and ABIs; second, there’s code legacy, i.e. decisions taken in the past that are kept for some reason (e.g. noone understands how it works). Like AVI demuxer in libavformat containing special cases for handling specific files that noone has ever seen.

Monolithic design is yet another problem that creeps into many projects with time. I don’t know why but quite often code gathers itself into intangible chunks and with time those chunks grow and get uglier. Anyone worked with FFmpeg might take a pleasure looking at mpegvideo in libavcodec, libswscale and libpostproc (especially if you look at the versions from about 2010).

So there are two ways how to deal with it — evolution (slowly change interfaces in hope to be better one day, deprecate stuff etc.) and revolution (simply forget it and write a new stuff from scratch).

In this and following posts I’ll describe a new framework (or whatever buzzword applies here) NihAV (Not-Invented-Here Audio-Video). Maybe I’ll even implement it for my own needs and the name should hint how much I care about existing design decisions.