On February 17, 2017 at 5:18:09 PM, Steve Green ([email protected]) wrote:
I assume you want to see screenshots? These are produced after the long journey to a Wowza server and back out the other side in jwplayer. I could capture the raw YUV and a key frame of H264 if that would help. No need, I see the issue. Attached is the original picture, and the results of supplying 1-byte aligned and 16-byte aligned YUV to avcodec_encode_video2(). On Feb 17, 2017, at 5:02 PM, Richard Kern <[email protected]> wrote: On February 17, 2017 at 4:53:03 PM, Steve Green ([email protected]) wrote: This is the basic pipeline that I have: BGRA frames -> sws_scale() -> YUV frames -> avcodec_encode_video2() -> av_interleaved_write_frame() .. and this works perfectly with x264 and most of the time with h264_videotoolbox. The issue with h264_videotoolbox happens when I try to stream at 854x480. From looking at the output, it appears that someone along the way is not happy with width not being a multiple of 16. There is a very clear shift/wrapping of pixels. As an experiment, I changed my use of av_image_fill_arrays() to align on 16 bytes (with a sufficiently larger buffer) and the resulting image is improved but still not correct. The basic shift is gone and the image is legible but the colors are off and I can see an artifact over the image. Can you post a frame grab of the unaligned and 16-byte aligned output? Given that x264 works and h264_videotoolbox doesn't, I’m tempted to point fingers at either VTCompressionSession or CVPixelBuffers + YUV, which would explain why I want to try AV_PIX_FMT_VIDEOTOOLBOX. I’ve read pretty much everything I can find on this but I cant find a single mention of 16-byte-multiple widths or strides. Any idea how to go about debugging this? _______________________________________________ Libav-user mailing list [email protected] http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/libav-user
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