This patch adds the --webm option, to allow the creation of WebM streams
without having to remux ivf into webm.
Change-Id: Ief93c114a6913c55a04cf51bce38f594372d0ad0
This patch enables ivfdec to decode WebM files. WebM demuxing is
provided by the Matthew Gregan's Nestegg library.
This patch also makes minor changes to the timebase->framerate
handling when doing Y4M output. For WebM files, the framerate is
guessed by looking at the first second of video. For IVF files,
the timebase=1/(2*fps) hack is still in place, but is only used
if the timebase denominator is less than 1000. This is in anticipation
of change I8d25b5b, which introduces the distinction between
framerate and timebase to ivfenc. In the case of high resolution
timebases, like 100ns, we would have to guess the framerate
like we do for WebM, but since WebM support in ivfenc will
deprecate IVF output, we just assume 30fps rather than writing the
lookahead code.
Change-Id: I1dd8600f13bf6071533d2816f005da9ede4f60a2
Changes 'The VP8 project' to 'The WebM project', for consistency
with other webmproject.org repositories.
Fixes issue #97.
Change-Id: I37c13ed5fbdb9d334ceef71c6350e9febed9bbba
When the license headers were updated, they accidentally contained
trailing whitespace, so unfortunately we have to touch all the files
again.
Change-Id: I236c05fade06589e417179c0444cb39b09e4200d
A large collection of example files may be found at
http://media.xiph.org/video/derf/
This also fixes a bug in ivfenc for uncompressed IVF input, which previously
appeared not to skip past the file header the second time it opened the file.
I don't actually have an IVF file with which to test this fix, however.
Change-Id: Id69a1e11a3fa16c4a4fa8944e880bcea090cd52b
This renames the vpx_codec/ directory to vpx/, to allow applications
to more consistently reference these includes with the vpx/ prefix.
This allows the includes to be installed in /usr/local/include/vpx
rather than polluting the system includes directory with an
excessive number of includes.
Change-Id: I7b0652a20543d93f38f421c60b0bbccde4d61b4f
Split the 'make install' target into two: install and dist. dist
retains the old make install behavior of building a "distribution"
release, with source files, build system, etc. install does what
one one expects -- installs into a tree in the filesystem, /usr/local
by default.
Change-Id: I0805681ac10f853ef94cdc3aa70981c6bea81b45