It was concluded that it would be more useful if a function that provided a data segment from
the original clip just provided a new Clip, i.e. useful things like PTS and meta is still
available in the segment. So, BytesForPTSInterval was renamed to TrimToPTSRange and now
provides a Clip. The test for this function was updated accordingly.
writing Clip.Bytes required a change to the Clip type. The Clip type now possess a slice that
references the memory in which the Frames should reference for the media. Appropriate changes have
been made to Extract and TestExtract to accomidate this change.
payload.go has been added which will contain functionality for dealing with MTS
payloads. A function has been added called Extract, which will return a Clip. Clip
is a type representing a sequence of media frames ([]Frame). Type Frame has been
added which represents a media frame. It provides fields to hold the media as
byte slice, PTS to hold the PES timestamp, an ID for identification of codec type
and finally the relevant Meta from the most recent PMT.
Added function to extract meta from first PMT found in a mpegts clip. This simply
wraps the logic we've used in vidrecord, i.e. Finding the PMT, converting to a
comcast gots psi.PSIBytesm, using HasDescriptor to get the meta descriptor, and
then mapping metadata. Also added testing.
This function is very similar to GetAll, except that is returns a map[string]string rather
than a [][2]string. It's become apparent that a map[string]string might be more useful in
some circumstances.
Added H264ID and H265ID consts and added logic to select this const for use in encoder based on mediaType param in NewEncoder. Also now
declaring PMT in NewEncoder so that we can set streamID correctly based on mediaType.
This func will return the first and last PTS from an MPEGTS clip by finding the first access unit, and then by moving backward from the end of the clip to find the start of the final PES packet.
Wrote a test to check mts encoding of video to validate packet creation etc. Test is failing because how I did mts
encoding is interesting, thinking about changing.