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H264 SPS The h.264 Sequence Parameter Set

The h.264 Sequence Parameter Set

April 20, 2011 by  Ben Mesander

This is a follow-up to my World’s Smallest h.264 Encoder post. I’ve received several emails asking about precise details of things in two entities in the h.264 bitstream: the Sequence Parameter Set (SPS) and the Picture Parameter Set (PPS). Both entities contain information that an h.264 decoder needs to decode the video data, for example the resolution and frame rate of the video.

Recall that an h.264 bitstream contains a sequence of Network Abstraction Layer (NAL) units. The SPS and PPS are both types of NAL units. The SPS NAL unit contains parameters that apply to a series of consecutive coded video pictures, referred to as a “coded video sequence” in the h.264 standard. The PPS NAL unit contains parameters that apply to the decoding of one or more individual pictures inside a coded video sequence.

In the case of my simple encoder, we emitted a single SPS and PPS at the start of the video data stream, but in the case of a more complex encoder, it would not be uncommon to see them inserted periodically in the data for two reasons—first, often a decoder will need to start decoding mid-stream, and second, because the encoder may wish to vary parameters for different parts of the stream in order to achieve better compression or quality goals.

In my trivial encoder, the h.264 SPS and PPS were hardcoded in hex as:

/* h.264 bitstreams */      
const uint8_t sps[] =      
{0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x01, 0x67, 0x42, 0x00, 0x0a, 0xf8, 0x41, 0xa2};      
const uint8_t pps[] =      
{0x00, 0x00, 0x00, 0x01, 0x68, 0xce, 0x38, 0x80};      

Let’s decode this into something readable from the spec. The first thing I did was to look at section 7 of the h.264 specification. I saw that at a minimum I had to choose how to fill in the SPS parameters in the table below. In the table, as in the standard, the type 

u(n)

 indicates an unsigned integer of n bits, and 

ue(v)

 indicates an unsigned exponential-golomb coded value of a variable number of bits. The spec doesn’t seem to define the maximum number of bits anywhere, but the reference encoder software uses 32. (People wishing to explore the security of decoder software may find it interesting to violate this assumption!)

Parameter Name Type Value Comments
forbidden_zero_bit u(1) Despite being forbidden, it must be set to 0!
nal_ref_idc u(2) 3 3 means it is “important” (this is an SPS)
nal_unit_type u(5) 7 Indicates this is a sequence parameter set
profile_idc u(8) 66 Baseline profile
constraint_set0_flag u(1) We’re not going to honor constraints
constraint_set1_flag u(1) We’re not going to honor constraints
constraint_set2_flag u(1) We’re not going to honor constraints
constraint_set3_flag u(1) We’re not going to honor constraints
reserved_zero_4bits u(4) Better set them to zero
level_idc u(8) 10 Level 1, sec A.3.1
seq_parameter_set_id ue(v) We’ll just use id 0.
log2_max_frame_num_minus4 ue(v) Let’s have as few frame numbers as possible
pic_order_cnt_type ue(v) Keep things simple
log2_max_pic_order_cnt_lsb_minus4 ue(v) Fewer is better.
num_ref_frames ue(v) We will only send I slices
gaps_in_frame_num_value_allowed_flag u(1) We will have no gaps
pic_width_in_mbs_minus_1 ue(v) 7 SQCIF is 8 macroblocks wide
pic_height_in_map_units_minus_1 ue(v) 5 SQCIF is 6 macroblocks high
frame_mbs_only_flag u(1) 1 We will not to field/frame encoding
direct_8x8_inference_flag u(1) Used for B slices. We will not send B slices
frame_cropping_flag u(1) We will not do frame cropping
vui_prameters_present_flag u(1) We will not send VUI data
rbsp_stop_one_bit u(1) 1 Stop bit. I missed this at first and it caused me much trouble.

Some key things here are the profile (

profile_idc

) and level (

level_idc

) that I chose, and the picture width and height. If you encode the above table in hex, you will get the values in the SPS array declared above.

A question I got a couple of times in email was about the width and height parameters—specifically, what to do if the picture width or height is not an integer multiple of macroblock size. Recall that, for the 4:2:0 sampling scheme in my encoder, a macroblock consists of 16×16 luma samples. In this case, you would set the 

frame_cropping_flag

 to 1, and reduce the number of pixels in the horizontal and vertical direction with the 

frame_crop_left_offset

frame_crop_right_offset

,

frame_crop_top_offset

, and 

frame_crop_bottom_offset

 parameters, which are conditionally present in the bitstream only if the 

frame_cropping_flag

 is set to one.

One interesting problem that we see fairly often with h.264 is when the container format (MP4, MOV, etc.) contains different values for some of these parameters than the SPS and PPS. In this case, we find different video players handle the streams differently.

A handy tool for decoding h.264 bitstreams, including the SPS, is the h264bitstream tool. It comes with a command line program that decodes a bitstream to the parameter names defined in the h.264 specification. Let’s look at its output for a sample mp4 file I downloaded from youtube. First, I extract the h.264 NAL units from the file using ffmpeg:

ffmpeg.exe -i Old Faithful.mp4 -vcodec copy -vbsf h264_mp4toannexb -an of.h264      

The NAL units now reside in the file 

of.h264

. I then run the h264_analyze command from the h264bitstream package to produce the following output:

h264_analyze of.h264      
!! Found NAL at offset 4 (0x0004), size 25 (0x0019)      
==================== NAL ====================      
forbidden_zero_bit : 0      
nal_ref_idc : 3      
nal_unit_type : 7 ( Sequence parameter set )      
======= SPS =======      
profile_idc : 100      
constraint_set0_flag : 0      
constraint_set1_flag : 0      
constraint_set2_flag : 0      
constraint_set3_flag : 0      
reserved_zero_4bits : 0      
level_idc : 31      
seq_parameter_set_id : 0      
chroma_format_idc : 1      
residual_colour_transform_flag : 0      
bit_depth_luma_minus8 : 0      
bit_depth_chroma_minus8 : 0      
qpprime_y_zero_transform_bypass_flag : 0      
seq_scaling_matrix_present_flag : 0      
log2_max_frame_num_minus4 : 3      
pic_order_cnt_type : 0      
log2_max_pic_order_cnt_lsb_minus4 : 3      
delta_pic_order_always_zero_flag : 0      
offset_for_non_ref_pic : 0      
offset_for_top_to_bottom_field : 0      
num_ref_frames_in_pic_order_cnt_cycle : 0      
num_ref_frames : 1      
gaps_in_frame_num_value_allowed_flag : 0      
pic_width_in_mbs_minus1 : 79      
pic_height_in_map_units_minus1 : 44      
frame_mbs_only_flag : 1      
mb_adaptive_frame_field_flag : 0      
direct_8x8_inference_flag : 1      
frame_cropping_flag : 0      
frame_crop_left_offset : 0      
frame_crop_right_offset : 0      
frame_crop_top_offset : 0      
frame_crop_bottom_offset : 0      
vui_parameters_present_flag : 1      
=== VUI ===      
aspect_ratio_info_present_flag : 1      
aspect_ratio_idc : 1      
sar_width : 0      
sar_height : 0      
overscan_info_present_flag : 0      
overscan_appropriate_flag : 0      
video_signal_type_present_flag : 0      
video_signal_type_present_flag : 0      
video_format : 0      
video_full_range_flag : 0      
colour_description_present_flag : 0      
colour_primaries : 0      
transfer_characteristics : 0      
matrix_coefficients : 0      
chroma_loc_info_present_flag : 0      
chroma_sample_loc_type_top_field : 0      
chroma_sample_loc_type_bottom_field : 0      
timing_info_present_flag : 1      
num_units_in_tick : 100      
time_scale : 5994      
fixed_frame_rate_flag : 1      
nal_hrd_parameters_present_flag : 0      
vcl_hrd_parameters_present_flag : 0      
low_delay_hrd_flag : 0      
pic_struct_present_flag : 0      
bitstream_restriction_flag : 1      
motion_vectors_over_pic_boundaries_flag : 1      
max_bytes_per_pic_denom : 0      
max_bits_per_mb_denom : 0      
log2_max_mv_length_horizontal : 11      
log2_max_mv_length_vertical : 11      
num_reorder_frames : 0      
max_dec_frame_buffering : 1      
=== HRD ===      
cpb_cnt_minus1 : 0      
bit_rate_scale : 0      
cpb_size_scale : 0      
initial_cpb_removal_delay_length_minus1 : 0      
cpb_removal_delay_length_minus1 : 0      
dpb_output_delay_length_minus1 : 0      
time_offset_length : 0      

The only additional thing I’d like to point out here is that this particular SPS also contains information about the frame rate of the video (see 

timing_info_present_flag

). These parameters must be closely checked when you generate bitstreams to ensure they agree with the container format that the h.264 will eventually be muxed into. Even a small error, such as 29.97 fps in one place and 30 fps in another, can result in severe audio/video synchronization problems.

Next time I will write about the h.264 Picture Parameter Set (PPS).

原文位址:https://cardinalpeak.com/blog/the-h-264-sequence-parameter-set/

其他參考:http://blog.csdn.net/zhuweigangzwg/article/details/44152239

http://blog.csdn.net/china_video_expert/article/details/5936463  

http://blog.csdn.net/dxpqxb/article/details/17140239