On 20 March 2017 at 19:52, Alex Converse <alex.conve...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Aliased compressed AAC bytes are almost certainly not meaningful SBR > data. In the wild this causes harsh artifacts switching HE-AAC streams > that don't have SBR headers aligned with segment boundaries. > > Turning off SBR falls back to a default set of upsampling parameters > that can function as a sort of error concealment. This is consistent > with how the decoder handles other sorts of errors. > --- > libavcodec/aacsbr_template.c | 1 + > 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) > > diff --git a/libavcodec/aacsbr_template.c b/libavcodec/aacsbr_template.c > index cf8621eee0..750131c64c 100644 > --- a/libavcodec/aacsbr_template.c > +++ b/libavcodec/aacsbr_template.c > @@ -1137,6 +1137,7 @@ int AAC_RENAME(ff_decode_sbr_extension)(AACContext > *ac, SpectralBandReplication > if (bytes_read > cnt) { > av_log(ac->avctx, AV_LOG_ERROR, > "Expected to read %d SBR bytes actually read %d.\n", cnt, > bytes_read); > + sbr_turnoff(sbr); > } > return cnt; > } > LGTM, makes sense if the SBR data is corrupt given how SBR works _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-devel mailing list ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel