The matrix provider allows the transformation matrix to be updated
for each frame based on the timestamp.
The following example effects using this were added to the demo:
* a zoom-in transition for the start of the video,
* cropping a rotating rectangular frame portion,
* rotating the frame around the y-axis in 3D.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 439791592
The new demo GlFrameProcessor is based on BitmapOverlayVideoProcessor
from the gl-demo. The demo-only GlFrameProcessor can be deleted once
Transformer supports this functionality.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 440059735
We don't currently have enough understanding of the correlation between a
specific SSIM score and video quality. Dropping to .90 to make most tests pass.
Especially when there's no discernible difference from the videos with .9 and
.95 SSIM.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 440047551
PeriodicDimmingFrameProcessor is an example of how a custom fragment
shader can be used to apply color changes that change over time.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 439840609
The matrix provider allows the transformation matrix to be updated
for each frame based on the timestamp.
The following example effects using this were added to the demo:
* a zoom-in transition for the start of the video,
* cropping a rotating rectangular frame portion,
* rotating the frame around the y-axis in 3D.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 439791592
We add an entire class like we do for parsing other codec initialization formats; it's currently not doing any parsing though (... initialization data is really simple for AV1 though: just the entire contents of the box).
For testing, we add the sample file, having been re-encoded with ffmpeg (and we also happen to have another av1 file, too).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 439453823
This allows apps to use AdvancedFrameProcessor to apply transformations
in 3D space. This functionality is not used in transformer otherwise.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 439313406
The encoder surface is no longer needed for the OpenGL setup and frame
processor initialization, as a placeholder surface is used instead. So
all of the setup can now be done in the factory method.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438844450
App code should get all of this information from TrackGroupInfo,
and should only need TrackGroup as a key to use for overrides.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438840925
This allows the MuxerWrapper to keep using trackTypeToTimeUs for
calculating the video duration but slightly changes the meaning of
its interleaving constraints.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438780686
This provides better compatibility with MediaExtractor, which does read these fields; we also need them for being able to mux file contents into another mp4 file.
Also, there is a minor refactor included so that we have an actual type for esds box contents instead of a pair.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438673825
The placeholder surface is either EGL_NO_SURFACE or a 1x1 pbuffer
depending on whether the device supports EGL_KHR_surfaceless_context.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438541846
Since the output textures and surfaces are managed by the
FrameProcessorChain, clearing them there makes sense.
This is also less error-prone as it might not be obvious to
someone implementing a GlFrameProcessor that they need to
glClear. (Clearing twice won't cause any problems.)
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438532247
This requires an additional nanos to micros conversion because
the SurfaceTexture uses nanos. But as the timestamps from the
MediaCodec decoder (propagated in DefaultCodec#releaseOutputBuffer) are
in microseconds no precision is lost here.
Also add test that checks output video duration.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438010490
MAXIMUM_AVERAGE_PIXEL_ABSOLUTE_DIFFERENCE was copied from a test
class, but BitmapTestUtil isn't a test. So the javadoc needs
rewording to reflect that.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 438001833