We've encountered something similar when transcoding FFV1 over the
network. So we used framemd5 not to verify FFV1's losslessness, but to
validate that the transcoding goes error-free :)
FFmpeg's framemd5 became *the* feature for professional video preservation.
So, thanks again for all your great work here!
Regards,
Pb
Indeed, ffmpeg framemd5 is my only possibility to check lossless
transcodings. A BIG THANK YOU FOR THAT!
Otherwise I could only test it to make it visually with e.g After
effects overlay the transcoded video to the original and make a
DIFFERENCE/DELTA video... (btw: some videotechnicians do that, because
they dont know about ffmpeg or framemd5 ;)
With the framemd5 checksum I can check many "Lossless" transcoders if
they do their job correct when using lossless codecs, and I was
wondering how many "professional" transcoders are destroying the video
when transcoding from lossless formats like uncompressed 4:2:2 10bit
(v210) to the same output format (v210) (because of an internal
YUV422->RGB blowup I guess).
Best Regards
Christoph
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