Some devices seem to throw an `IllegalArgumentException` when
attempting to set a valid media button broadcast receiver
for playback resumption. This change handles this exception
as a no-op to avoid crashing the app. As a result, playback
resumption with media keys isn't going to work on these
devices.
This change needs to be reverted once the root cause on these
devices has been fixed (see internal bug ref in source).
Issue: androidx/media#1730
PiperOrigin-RevId: 677904243
This boolean only exists to be changed in source, but it is now used
as part of a 3-way fallback logic (since adding `HttpEngine`
integration), so it's not really more convenient or clearer to change
this constant than just hack the code of `getHttpDataSourceFactory`
directly.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 677834348
Allow apps to preload the first period of the next window in
the playlist of `ExoPlayer`. By default playlist preloading is
disabled. To enable preloading,
`ExoPlayer.setPreloadConfiguration(PreloadConfiguration)` can be
called.
`LoadControl` determines when to preload with its implemenation of `shouldContinuePreloading(timeline, mediaPeriodId, bufferedDurationUs)`.
The implementation in `DefaultLoadControl` allows preloading only when
the player isn't currently loading for playback. Apps can override this
behaviour.
Issue: androidx/media#468
PiperOrigin-RevId: 677786017
This CL adds `SonicTest` and `RandomParameterizedSonicTest` as
initial basic unit testing for `Sonic.java`. The tested scenarios
do not necessarily verify a correct implementation of Sonic, but rather
hope to catch any behaviour change from the current implementation.
The change includes a small fix for a lossy simplification and also
checks whether the output sample count matches the expected drift from
the truncation accumulation error present in Sonic's resampler. This is
important as pre-work for fixing issues with unexpected durations within
`SonicAudioProcessor` and `SpeedChangingAudioProcessor` that cause AV
sync issues for speed changing effects.
This is a partial roll forward of e88d6fe459, which was rolled back in
873d485056.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 677756854
AudioTrack doesn't automatically ramp up the volume after a flush
(only when resuming with play after a pause), which causes audible
pop sounds in most cases. The issue can be avoided by manually
applying a short 20ms volume ramp, the same duration used by the
platform for the automatic volume ramping where available.
Together with the already submitted 6147050b90, this fixes the
unwanted pop sounds for most cases in the desired way. It only
leaves two cases that are not handled perfectly:
- If the media file itself contains a volume ramp at the beginning,
we wouldn't need this additional ramping. Given the extremely
short duration, this seems ignorable and we can treat it as a
future feature request to mark the beginning of media in a special
way that can then disable the volume ramping.
- For seamless period transitions where we keep using the same
AudioTrack, we may still get a pop sound at the transition. To
solve this, we'd need a dedicated audio processor to either ramp
the end of media down and the beginning of the next item up, or
apply a very short cross-fade. Either way, we need new signalling
to identify cases where the media originates from the same source
and this effect should not be applied (e.g. when re-concatenating
clipped audio snippets from the same file).
PiperOrigin-RevId: 676860234
When sending a custom command with `browser.sendCustomCommand` when
connected to a legacy browser service, the custom command was delivered to `MediaSessionCompat.Callback.onCustomAction` instead of the service method
`onCustomAction`. The difference is that the service version can return an
async response with a bundle, while the session callback version doesn't
have a return value.
Hence, the service method was never called and it wasn't possible to send
a reponse or signal an error back to the browser. The resulting
`ListanableFuture` simply always immediately resolved to a success.
This change overrides `ListenableFuture<SessionResult> sendCustomCommand(SessionCommand command, Bundle args)` in
`MediaBrowserImplLegacy` to use the `MediaBrowserCompat` method to send
instead of the `MediaControlleCompat` method that was used by the subclass
`MediaControllerImplLegacy`. This involves the service callback instead of the
session callback and enables `MediaBrowser` to get the actual return value
from the legacy service.
Issue: androidx/media#1474
#cherrypick
PiperOrigin-RevId: 676519314
Last buffer was not flipped, so was writing the garbage data between
limit and capacity, rather than the actual data between position and
limit.
As a result, all PCM audio dump files need updating.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 676452990
- Added logic to parse media duration from the `mdhd` box for accurate frame rate calculation.
- Fallbacks to track duration from `tkhd` when `mdhd` contains invalid or missing data.
- Avoids incorrect frame rate calculations in MP4 files with an edit list (`elst`) box.
- Adds frame rate calculations for partially fragmented MP4 files.
- Verified accuracy with tools like `mediainfo` and `ffprobe`.
Issue: androidx/media#1531
**Note**: The slight difference in frame rate values in dump files that aren’t MP4s with an edit list or fragmented MP4s isn’t due to differences in `tkhd` and `mdhd` duration values (which should be identical for non-edited or non-fragmented files). Rather, it’s because they are calculated using different timescales. The `mvhd` box defines a global movie timescale, which is used for the track's `tkhd` duration. Meanwhile, each track’s `mdhd` box defines its own timescale specific to its content type, which we now use for more accurate frame rate calculation.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 676046744
This method is documented that it may only be called in `STATE_OPENED`
or `STATE_OPENED_WITH_KEYS`. It's possible for it to be called in other
states (like `STATE_ERROR`) without this guard.
Previously this didn't cause issues, but since 9d62845c45
we assume that the `sessionId` is non-null in this method, which results
in an `IllegalStateException` when the documented state restriction is
ignored.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675969256
This is no longer needed now our `compileSdk` implies a new-enough AGP
which does this out-lining automatically via R8. See also
https://issuetracker.google.com/345472586#comment7
There's no plan to remove the `ApiXXX` classes, but no new ones need
to be added.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675940634
This is to allow not setting the MediaFormat OPERATING_RATE and PRIORITY
altogether. The current behvaiour, if left the value `UNSET`, it'll apply the
our optimizations, but apps might want to disable this optimization.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675923909
The Galaxy Tab S7 FE has a device issue that causes 60fps secure H264 streams to be marked as unsupported. This CL adds a workaround for this issue by checking the CDD required support for secure H264 in addition to the current check on standard H264. If the provided performance points do not cover the CDD requirement of support 720p H264 at 60fps, then it falls back to using legacy methods for checking frame rate and resolution support.
Issue: androidx/media#1619
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675920968
After the change in a879bc2154, the Sequence won't have repeated
EditedMediaItems. Thus if the sequence is looping, the last EditedMediaItems
in the Sequence object might not corresponds to the last item in the "logical"
sequence.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675912197
NotificationChannel and NotificationChannelGroup are public APIs that were
added in Android O, so at this point it is okay to have them appear in API
signatures.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675756005
The muxer might not have accepted the first sample, if it
is waiting for audio track.
This bug causes issue when
1. VideoSampleExporter gives first sample (timestamp = 0) to the muxer.
2. Muxer does not write it because its waiting for audio track.
3. The video pipleline has processed all the sample and they are ready
to be consumed.
4. VideoSampleExporter fetches the next available sample from encoder (which is still with timestamp = 0) but it changes its timestamp to last timestamp because VideoSampleExporter thinks it has muxed the sample at timestamp zero, but in reality it hasn't. This is because the flag `hasMuxedTimestampZero` is set when queueing the input, rather than actually muxing the input.
This scenario can happen when video is processed much faster than
the audio.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675565603
Previously, track IDs were added to `trackIndicesPerSampleInQueuedOrder`
even when the sample was not committed. This caused issues where attempts
to read samples from the `SampleQueue` returned `C.RESULT_READ_NOTHING`,
which led to an exception being thrown due to the assumption that samples
were available to read.
This fix updates the logic to track sample commits by comparing the write index before and after calling `SampleQueue.sampleMetadata`. Track indices are only added if the sample was committed, ensuring accurate sample handling and avoiding exceptions.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675526115
to
LAST_SAMPLE_DURATION_BEHAVIOR_SET_FROM_END_OF_STREAM_BUFFER_OR_DUPLICATE_PREVIOUS
This CL also combines LAST_SAMPLE_DURATION_BEHAVIOR_SET_FROM_END_OF_STREAM_BUFFER
and LAST_SAMPLE_DURATION_BEHAVIOR_DUPLICATE_PREVIOUS.
The reason for combining the two enums is that, when the option
to use END_OF_STREAM_BUFFER is selected and if the EOS buffer is
not provided then the muxer anyways fallbacks to duplicate
duration behavior.
The last sample with 0 durations seems less useful so
change the default behavior to non-zero duration.
This will also match the behavior with MediaMuxer.
PiperOrigin-RevId: 675189932