This document is a tutorial/initiation for writing simple filters in libavfilter. Foreword: just like everything else in FFmpeg, libavfilter is monolithic, which means that it is highly recommended that you submit your filters to the FFmpeg development mailing-list and make sure it is applied. Otherwise, your filter is likely to have a very short lifetime due to more a less regular internal API changes, and a limited distribution, review, and testing. Bootstrap ========= Let's say you want to write a new simple video filter called "foobar" which takes one frame in input, changes the pixels in whatever fashion you fancy, and outputs the modified frame. The most simple way of doing this is to take a similar filter. We'll pick edgedetect, but any other should do. You can look for others using the `./ffmpeg -v 0 -filters|grep ' V->V '` command. - cp libavfilter/vf_{edgedetect,foobar}.c - sed -i s/edgedetect/foobar/g -i libavfilter/vf_foobar.c - sed -i s/EdgeDetect/Foobar/g -i libavfilter/vf_foobar.c - edit libavfilter/Makefile, and add an entry for "foobar" following the pattern of the other filters. - edit libavfilter/allfilters.c, and add an entry for "foobar" following the pattern of the other filters. - ./configure ... - make -j ffmpeg - ./ffmpeg -i tests/lena.pnm -vf foobar foobar.png If everything went right, you should get a foobar.png with Lena edge-detected. That's it, your new playground is ready. Some little details about what's going on: libavfilter/allfilters.c:avfilter_register_all() is called at runtime to create a list of the available filters, but it's important to know that this file is also parsed by the configure script, which in turn will define variables for the build system and the C: --- after running configure --- $ grep FOOBAR config.mak CONFIG_FOOBAR_FILTER=yes $ grep FOOBAR config.h #define CONFIG_FOOBAR_FILTER 1 CONFIG_FOOBAR_FILTER=yes from the config.mak is later used to enable the filter in libavfilter/Makefile and CONFIG_FOOBAR_FILTER=1 from the config.h will be used for registering the filter in libavfilter/allfilters.c. Filter code layout ================== You now need some theory about the general code layout of a filter. Open your libavfilter/vf_foobar.c. This section will detail the important parts of the code you need to understand before messing with it. Copyright --------- First chunk is the copyright. Most filters are LGPL, and we are assuming vf_foobar is as well. We are also assuming vf_foobar is not an edge detector filter, so you can update the boilerplate with your credits. Doxy ---- Next chunk is the Doxygen about the file. See http://ffmpeg.org/doxygen/trunk/. Detail here what the filter is, does, and add some references if you feel like it. Context ------- Skip the headers and scroll down to the definition of FoobarContext. This is your local state context. It is already filled with 0 when you get it so do not worry about uninitialized read into this context. This is where you put every "global" information you need, typically the variable storing the user options. You'll notice the first field "const AVClass *class"; it's the only field you need to keep assuming you have a context. There are some magic you don't care about around this field, just let it be (in first position) for now. Options ------- Then comes the options array. This is what will define the user accessible options. For example, -vf foobar=mode=colormix:high=0.4:low=0.1. Most options have the following pattern: name, description, offset, type, default value, minimum value, maximum value, flags - name is the option name, keep it simple, lowercase - description are short, in lowercase, without period, and describe what they do, for example "set the foo of the bar" - offset is the offset of the field in your local context, see the OFFSET() macro; the option parser will use that information to fill the fields according to the user input - type is any of AV_OPT_TYPE_* defined in libavutil/opt.h - default value is an union where you pick the appropriate type; "{.dbl=0.3}", "{.i64=0x234}", "{.str=NULL}", ... - min and max values define the range of available values, inclusive - flags are AVOption generic flags. See AV_OPT_FLAG_* definitions In doubt, just look at the other AVOption definitions all around the codebase, there are tons of examples. Class ----- AVFILTER_DEFINE_CLASS(foobar) will define a unique foobar_class with some kind of signature referencing the options, etc. which will be referenced in the definition of the AVFilter. Filter definition ----------------- At the end of the file, you will find foobar_inputs, foobar_outputs and the AVFilter ff_vf_foobar. Don't forget to update the AVFilter.description with a description of what the filter does, starting with a capitalized letter and ending with a period. You'd better drop the AVFilter.flags entry for now, and re-add them later depending on the capabilities of your filter. Callbacks --------- Let's now study the common callbacks. Before going into details, note that all these callbacks are explained in details in libavfilter/avfilter.h, so in doubt, refer to the doxy in that file. init() ~~~~~~ First one to be called is init(). It's flagged as cold because not called often. Look for "cold" on http://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Attributes.html for more information. As the name suggests, init() is where you eventually initialize and allocate your buffers, pre-compute your data, etc. Note that at this point, your local context already has the user options initialized, but you still haven't any clue about the kind of data input you will get, so this function is often mainly used to sanitize the user options. Some init()s will also define the number of inputs or outputs dynamically according to the user options. A good example of this is the split filter, but we won't cover this here since vf_foobar is just a simple 1:1 filter. uninit() ~~~~~~~~ Similarly, there is the uninit() callback, doing what the name suggest. Free everything you allocated here. query_formats() ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is following the init() and is used for the format negotiation, basically where you say what pixel format(s) (gray, rgb 32, yuv 4:2:0, ...) you accept for your inputs, and what you can output. All pixel formats are defined in libavutil/pixfmt.h. If you don't change the pixel format between the input and the output, you just have to define a pixel formats array and call ff_set_common_formats(). For more complex negotiation, you can refer to other filters such as vf_scale. config_props() ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This callback is not necessary, but you will probably have one or more config_props() anyway. It's not a callback for the filter itself but for its inputs or outputs (they're called "pads" - AVFilterPad - in libavfilter's lexicon). Inside the input config_props(), you are at a point where you know which pixel format has been picked after query_formats(), and more information such as the video width and height (inlink->{w,h}). So if you need to update your internal context state depending on your input you can do it here. In edgedetect you can see that this callback is used to allocate buffers depending on these information. They will be destroyed in uninit(). Inside the output config_props(), you can define what you want to change in the output. Typically, if your filter is going to double the size of the video, you will update outlink->w and outlink->h. filter_frame() ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ This is the callback you are waiting from the beginning: it is where you process the received frames. Along with the frame, you get the input link from where the frame comes from. static int filter_frame(AVFilterLink *inlink, AVFrame *in) { ... } You can get the filter context through that input link: AVFilterContext *ctx = inlink->dst; Then access your internal state context: FoobarContext *foobar = ctx->priv; And also the output link where you will send your frame when you are done: AVFilterLink *outlink = ctx->outputs[0]; Here, we are picking the first output. You can have several, but in our case we only have one since we are in a 1:1 input-output situation. If you want to define a simple pass-through filter, you can just do: return ff_filter_frame(outlink, in); But of course, you probably want to change the data of that frame. This can be done by accessing frame->data[] and frame->linesize[]. Important note here: the width does NOT match the linesize. The linesize is always greater or equal to the width. The padding created should not be changed or even read. Typically, keep in mind that a previous filter in your chain might have altered the frame dimension but not the linesize. Imagine a crop filter that halves the video size: the linesizes won't be changed, just the width. <-------------- linesize ------------------------> +-------------------------------+----------------+ ^ | | | | | | | | | picture | padding | | height | | | | | | | | +-------------------------------+----------------+ v <----------- width -------------> Before modifying the "in" frame, you have to make sure it is writable, or get a new one. Multiple scenarios are possible here depending on the kind of processing you are doing. Let's say you want to change one pixel depending on multiple pixels (typically the surrounding ones) of the input. In that case, you can't do an in-place processing of the input so you will need to allocate a new frame, with the same properties as the input one, and send that new frame to the next filter: AVFrame *out = ff_get_video_buffer(outlink, outlink->w, outlink->h); if (!out) { av_frame_free(&in); return AVERROR(ENOMEM); } av_frame_copy_props(out, in); // out->data[...] = foobar(in->data[...]) av_frame_free(&in); return ff_filter_frame(outlink, out); In-place processing ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you can just alter the input frame, you probably just want to do that instead: av_frame_make_writable(in); // in->data[...] = foobar(in->data[...]) return ff_filter_frame(outlink, in); You may wonder why a frame might not be writable. The answer is that for example a previous filter might still own the frame data: imagine a filter prior to yours in the filtergraph that needs to cache the frame. You must not alter that frame, otherwise it will make that previous filter buggy. This is where av_frame_make_writable() helps (it won't have any effect if the frame already is writable). The problem with using av_frame_make_writable() is that in the worst case it will copy the whole input frame before you change it all over again with your filter: if the frame is not writable, av_frame_make_writable() will allocate new buffers, and copy the input frame data. You don't want that, and you can avoid it by just allocating a new buffer if necessary, and process from in to out in your filter, saving the memcpy. Generally, this is done following this scheme: int direct = 0; AVFrame *out; if (av_frame_is_writable(in)) { direct = 1; out = in; } else { out = ff_get_video_buffer(outlink, outlink->w, outlink->h); if (!out) { av_frame_free(&in); return AVERROR(ENOMEM); } av_frame_copy_props(out, in); } // out->data[...] = foobar(in->data[...]) if (!direct) av_frame_free(&in); return ff_filter_frame(outlink, out); Of course, this will only work if you can do in-place processing. To test if your filter handles well the permissions, you can use the perms filter. For example with: -vf perms=random,foobar Make sure no automatic pixel conversion is inserted between perms and foobar, otherwise the frames permissions might change again and the test will be meaningless: add av_log(0,0,"direct=%d\n",direct) in your code to check that. You can avoid the issue with something like: -vf format=rgb24,perms=random,foobar ...assuming your filter accepts rgb24 of course. This will make sure the necessary conversion is inserted before the perms filter. Timeline ~~~~~~~~ Adding timeline support (http://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-filters.html#Timeline-editing) is often an easy feature to add. In the most simple case, you just have to add AVFILTER_FLAG_SUPPORT_TIMELINE_GENERIC to the AVFilter.flags. You can typically do this when your filter does not need to save the previous context frames, or basically if your filter just alter whatever goes in and doesn't need previous/future information. See for instance commit 86cb986ce that adds timeline support to the fieldorder filter. In some cases, you might need to reset your context somehow. This is handled by the AVFILTER_FLAG_SUPPORT_TIMELINE_INTERNAL flag which is used if the filter must not process the frames but still wants to keep track of the frames going through (to keep them in cache for when it's enabled again). See for example commit 69d72140a that adds timeline support to the phase filter. Threading ~~~~~~~~~ libavfilter does not yet support frame threading, but you can add slice threading to your filters. Let's say the foobar filter has the following frame processing function: dst = out->data[0]; src = in ->data[0]; for (y = 0; y < inlink->h; y++) { for (x = 0; x < inlink->w; x++) dst[x] = foobar(src[x]); dst += out->linesize[0]; src += in ->linesize[0]; } The first thing is to make this function work into slices. The new code will look like this: for (y = slice_start; y < slice_end; y++) { for (x = 0; x < inlink->w; x++) dst[x] = foobar(src[x]); dst += out->linesize[0]; src += in ->linesize[0]; } The source and destination pointers, and slice_start/slice_end will be defined according to the number of jobs. Generally, it looks like this: const int slice_start = (in->height * jobnr ) / nb_jobs; const int slice_end = (in->height * (jobnr+1)) / nb_jobs; uint8_t *dst = out->data[0] + slice_start * out->linesize[0]; const uint8_t *src = in->data[0] + slice_start * in->linesize[0]; This new code will be isolated in a new filter_slice(): static int filter_slice(AVFilterContext *ctx, void *arg, int jobnr, int nb_jobs) { ... } Note that we need our input and output frame to define slice_{start,end} and dst/src, which are not available in that callback. They will be transmitted through the opaque void *arg. You have to define a structure which contains everything you need: typedef struct ThreadData { AVFrame *in, *out; } ThreadData; If you need some more information from your local context, put them here. In you filter_slice function, you access it like that: const ThreadData *td = arg; Then in your filter_frame() callback, you need to call the threading distributor with something like this: ThreadData td; // ... td.in = in; td.out = out; ctx->internal->execute(ctx, filter_slice, &td, NULL, FFMIN(outlink->h, ctx->graph->nb_threads)); // ... return ff_filter_frame(outlink, out); Last step is to add AVFILTER_FLAG_SLICE_THREADS flag to AVFilter.flags. For more example of slice threading additions, you can try to run git log -p --grep 'slice threading' libavfilter/ Finalization ~~~~~~~~~~~~ When your awesome filter is finished, you have a few more steps before you're done: - write its documentation in doc/filters.texi, and test the output with make doc/ffmpeg-filters.html. - add a FATE test, generally by adding an entry in tests/fate/filter-video.mak, add running make fate-filter-foobar GEN=1 to generate the data. - add an entry in the Changelog - edit libavfilter/version.h and increase LIBAVFILTER_VERSION_MINOR by one (and reset LIBAVFILTER_VERSION_MICRO to 100) - git add ... && git commit -m "avfilter: add foobar filter." && git format-patch -1 When all of this is done, you can submit your patch to the ffmpeg-devel mailing-list for review. If you need any help, feel free to come on our IRC channel, #ffmpeg-devel on irc.freenode.net.