Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
I will need the source file
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 15 Nov 2012 at 9:40
The source material is from a standard test sequence. Before I make it
available, could you read:
http://tech.ebu.ch/webdav/site/tech/shared/hdtv/svt-multiformat-conditions-v10.p
df and confirm you are able to comply with the Copyright licence.
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 20 Nov 2012 at 2:37
For further information, I've uploaded a graph of FFmbc Pro-Res HQ vs Apple
Pro-Res HQ. It can be seen that the overall quality seems to be fractionally
less, which could be accounted for by the (presumed) bitrate spike at the start.
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8070/8203473534_004a3bd68f_o.png
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 20 Nov 2012 at 3:41
Sure the copyright is fine
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 21 Nov 2012 at 10:50
Replied via email.
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 22 Nov 2012 at 4:31
This file has black frames at the beginning, and that's why you have so high
PSNR at the beginning. I'm investigating.
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 6 Dec 2012 at 7:54
The psnr tool uses the first frame of motion video in the original file
($OFFSET) and hunts through the first 1750 frames of the encoded video file for
the frame that matches most. It then uses this frame to create the ITU J.247
compliant PSNR output.
START_POSN=`calcpsnr -g $FRAME_SIZE -l 1750 -z 1 -s $OFFSET,0 $ORIG_FILE
"$WORK_FILE".yuv|sed -n '/Best Y diff/ {s/.*frame = //;s/, .*//;p}'`
calcpsnr -j247 -g $FRAME_SIZE -w t2b2l2r2 -b -l $NUM_FRAMES -s
$OFFSET,$START_POSN $ORIG_FILE "$WORK_FILE".yuv > "$WORK_FILE".psnr
calcpsnr is available at:
http://mpeg2videotools.cvs.sourceforge.net/viewvc/mpeg2videotools/mpeg2videotool
s/src/calcpsnr/
UYVY files are created using something like:
mencoder -demuxer lavf -nosound -ovc raw -of rawvideo "$WORK_FILE" -o
"$WORK_FILE".yuv
The graph shown contains the correct number of motion video frames (and matches
the number of Frames created when using the proprietary Pro-Res encoder).
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 7 Dec 2012 at 11:10
What's $OFFSET here ?
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 8 Dec 2012 at 9:58
Offset = num of frames to first frame of video in original
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 8 Dec 2012 at 11:22
Non-black motion video, I meant.
Original comment by cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 8 Dec 2012 at 11:23
Ok, to compare accurately, I took the source file and encoded it using FCP.
I then encoded the same source file with ffmbc and then used calcpsnr.
I use ffmbc -i <file> -pix_fmt uyvy422 <file.yuv> to create yuv files.
FFmbc is constantly 1 db PSNR higher than Apple, so I cannot reproduce what you
are seeing.
The Apple encoded file you sent me if unaligned so is not suitable for testing.
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 9 Dec 2012 at 1:44
Actually I was wrong, apple encoder was better, but I fixed that and it is now
better
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 7 Mar 2013 at 6:38
Should be fixed in rc8
Original comment by baptiste...@gmail.com
on 14 Mar 2013 at 9:04
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
cy.thomp...@googlemail.com
on 14 Nov 2012 at 3:41