Video Decoding¶
The DECODE class of functions take a compressed bitstream as input and converts it to raw frames as output.
DECODE processes only pure or elementary video streams with the exception of AV1/VP9/VP8 decoders, which accept the IVF format. The library can process bitstreams that reside in an IVF container but cannot process bitstreams that reside in any other container format, such as MP4 or MPEG.
The application must first demultiplex the bitstreams. Demultiplexing extracts pure video streams out of the container format. The application can provide the input bitstream as one complete frame of data, a partial frame (less than one complete frame), or as multiple frames. If only a partial frame is provided, DECODE internally constructs one frame of data before decoding it.
The time stamp of a bitstream buffer must be accurate to the first byte of the frame data. For H.264 the first byte of the frame data comes from the NAL unit in the video coding layer. For MPEG-2 or VC-1 the first byte of the frame data comes from the picture header. DECODE passes the time stamp to the output surface for audio and video multiplexing or synchronization.
Decoding the first frame is a special case because DECODE does not provide enough configuration parameters to correctly process the bitstream. DECODE searches for the sequence header (a sequence parameter set in H.264 or a sequence header in MPEG-2 and VC-1) that contains the video configuration parameters used to encode subsequent video frames. The decoder skips any bitstream prior to the sequence header. In the case of multiple sequence headers in the bitstream, DECODE adopts the new configuration parameters, ensuring proper decoding of subsequent frames.
DECODE supports repositioning of the bitstream at any time during decoding. Because there is no way to obtain the correct sequence header associated with the specified bitstream position after a position change, the application must supply DECODE with a sequence header before the decoder can process the next frame at the new position. If the sequence header required to correctly decode the bitstream at the new position is not provided by the application, DECODE treats the new location as a new “first frame” and follows the procedure for decoding first frames.