World of Might and Magic  0.2.0
Open reimplementation of Might and Magic 6 7 8 game engine
libavformat

I/O and Muxing/Demuxing Library. Подробнее...

+ Граф связей класса libavformat:

Группы

 Demuxing
 Demuxers read a media file and split it into chunks of data (packets). A packet contains one or more encoded frames which belongs to a single elementary stream. In the lavf API this process is represented by the avformat_open_input() function for opening a file, av_read_frame() for reading a single packet and finally avformat_close_input(), which does the cleanup.
 
 Muxing
 Muxers take encoded data in the form of AVPackets and write it into files or other output bytestreams in the specified container format.
 
 I/O Read/Write
 
 Demuxers
 
 I/O Protocols
 
 Internal
 
 
 Core functions
 
 Utility functions
 

Файлы

файл  avformat.h
 
файл  version.h
 

Подробное описание

I/O and Muxing/Demuxing Library.

Libavformat (lavf) is a library for dealing with various media container formats. Its main two purposes are demuxing - i.e. splitting a media file into component streams, and the reverse process of muxing - writing supplied data in a specified container format. It also has an I/O module which supports a number of protocols for accessing the data (e.g. file, tcp, http and others). Unless you are absolutely sure you won't use libavformat's network capabilities, you should also call avformat_network_init().

A supported input format is described by an AVInputFormat struct, conversely an output format is described by AVOutputFormat. You can iterate over all input/output formats using the av_demuxer_iterate / av_muxer_iterate() functions. The protocols layer is not part of the public API, so you can only get the names of supported protocols with the avio_enum_protocols() function.

Main lavf structure used for both muxing and demuxing is AVFormatContext, which exports all information about the file being read or written. As with most Libavformat structures, its size is not part of public ABI, so it cannot be allocated on stack or directly with av_malloc(). To create an AVFormatContext, use avformat_alloc_context() (some functions, like avformat_open_input() might do that for you).

Most importantly an AVFormatContext contains:

Passing options to (de)muxers

It is possible to configure lavf muxers and demuxers using the AVOptions mechanism. Generic (format-independent) libavformat options are provided by AVFormatContext, they can be examined from a user program by calling av_opt_next() / av_opt_find() on an allocated AVFormatContext (or its AVClass from avformat_get_class()). Private (format-specific) options are provided by AVFormatContext.priv_data if and only if AVInputFormat.priv_class / AVOutputFormat.priv_class of the corresponding format struct is non-NULL. Further options may be provided by the I/O context, if its AVClass is non-NULL, and the protocols layer. See the discussion on nesting in AVOptions documentation to learn how to access those.

urls

URL strings in libavformat are made of a scheme/protocol, a ':', and a scheme specific string. URLs without a scheme and ':' used for local files are supported but deprecated. "file:" should be used for local files.

It is important that the scheme string is not taken from untrusted sources without checks.

Note that some schemes/protocols are quite powerful, allowing access to both local and remote files, parts of them, concatenations of them, local audio and video devices and so on.