Hi -
Thanks for responding. I’m sure you’re right about the cause of the problem;
I’d guess that the offending “format” (is that the proper term for this?) is
somehow a default (as it’s not specified explicitly in the code I copied…). The
problem is that it’s rather difficult to find out how to change such things,
given my relative unfamiliarity with FFmpeg.
On the other hand, in the time since I posted my query, I managed to stumble
upon some source code that shows how to use the H.264 codec to create movies
from raw RGB data. The code compiled trivially on Mac and Windows, and I’ve
successfully created .mov, .avi, and .mp4 files from it, on both platforms...
I expect that with sufficient study of the working example code, I could learn
enough to add the necessary settings/parameters to the video_encode_example()
function. This would be educational with regard to learning the FFmpeg API, and
thus be valuable, but for now I’m just going to swap out the code entirely…
For anyone else who’s interested, here’s the link:
http://www.imc-store.com.au/Articles.asp?ID=276
- Philip
> On Jan 27, 2015, at 1:27 PM, Carl Eugen Hoyos <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Philip Schneider <pjschneider@...> writes:
>
>> QuickTimePlayer doesn’t like the format (tries to “convert”
>> and says “QuickTime Player can’t open <filename>”.
>>
>> The “file” command gives me back this:
>>
>> JVT NAL sequence, H.264 video <at> L 13
>
> I suspect Quicktime does not support JVT NAL sequences,
> you can test with files produced with ffmpeg:
> $ ffmpeg -f lavfi -i testsrc -pix_fmt yuv420p -t 10 out.h264
>
> You probably want to mux into mov.
>
> Carl Eugen
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