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192 lines
6.6 KiB
192 lines
6.6 KiB
Using AVIFile.
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Initializing the AVIFile DLL:
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Before using any of the APIs in AVIFILE.DLL, be sure to
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call AVIStreamInit. After using them, call AVIStreamExit.
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If you don't, bad things will happen.
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Using AVIFile to read some kind of file:
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First, call AVIFileOpen with the OF_READ flag to open the file.
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Then, you can call AVIFileInfo to find out how many streams are in
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the file, and AVIFileGetStream to retrieve the streams you want.
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Once you have a stream, you can can AVIStreamReadFormat to get the
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bitmap format or wave format, and then call AVIStreamRead to actually
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read the data you want.
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AVIFile and the Component Object model:
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The AVIFile APIs include two interfaces, IAVIFile and IAVIStream,
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which work with the Component Object model which is part of OLE 2.0.
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Class IDs
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Each server or DLL that handles these interfaces needs to have a
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Globally Unique ID (GUID), so that it can be distinguished from all
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other handlers. OLE uses 16-byte identifiers for this purpose. If
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you're making a new handler, you can run the UUIDGEN program to make
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yourself a unique ID.
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The Registration Database
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The registration database is essentially just a replacement for .INI
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files. To look at what's going on in it, run "regedit -v".
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DLLs which implement the IAVIFile and IAVIStream interfaces all need
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to be listed in the registration database so that they can be found
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when necessary.
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Each DLL must be listed in the registration database by class ID,
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with entries of the form:
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Clsid\{00020003-0000-0000-C000-000000000046} = Wave File reader/writer
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Clsid\{00020003-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}\InprocServer = wavefile.dll
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where HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT is the root of the entire registration
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database. The InProcServer entry indicates that wavefile.dll can be
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loaded within an application to implement the class in question.
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The AVIFile library uses additional entries in the registration
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database in order to know which handler to use by default to open a
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given file. If the file is a RIFF file,
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AVIFile\Extensions\WAV = {00020003-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AVIFile\RIFFHandlers\WAVE = {00020003-0000-0000-C000-000000000046}
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You get a GUID by running the uuidgen.exe program that comes
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with the SDK; it will spit out a 16-byte hex number for you. You then
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make a file with a .REG extension that looks like:
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REGEDIT
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Clsid\{5C2B8200-E2C8-1068-B1CA-6066188C6002} = JFIF (JPEG) Files
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Clsid\{5C2B8200-E2C8-1068-B1CA-6066188C6002}\InprocServer =jfiffile.dll
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HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AVIFile\Extensions\JPG = {5C2B8200-E2C8-1068-B1CA-6066188C6002}
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(Of course, use your GUID here.) Then, on a user's machine, they can run
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regedit -s whatever.reg and these definitions will get added to the
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registration database, allowing the system to find your DLL and know what
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sorts of files it can load.
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What are IAVIFile and IAVIStream?
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(Note: you may just want to read the OLE 2 documentation here....)
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These are examples of "interfaces". An interface is a collection of
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"methods".
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Implementing a handler DLL
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IClassFactory
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Obviously, it isn't enough for OLE to know the name of your DLL; some
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standard entry point is required to establish communications. The
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method through which COMPOBJ.DLL does this isn't exactly
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straightforward. A handler DLL must export a DllGetClassObject
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function; COMPOBJ calls that function to ask the DLL to return an
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instance of the IClassFactory interface, which it then uses to
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actually acquire an instance of the IAVIFile interface that we
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actually care about.
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Single-stream vs. Multi-stream
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AVI files obviously support more than one stream of data in each
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file. Wave files, for example, are much simpler, in that they only
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can have exactly one stream of audio. This means that we only need
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one stream object around, and we can make things even simpler by
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having the same object support both the stream and file interfaces.
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If you know that your handler will support, say, exactly one audio
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and one video stream, things are also simpler than the completely
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general case, because when you create your file object, you know that
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you will have to create exactly two stream objects.
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Read-only vs. Read-write
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A handler can be written which only supports reading or writing; you
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can always return an error code from any method. (One suggestion:
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don't return unsupported from the FindSample function, but rather
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just return that every frame is a key frame, every frame is non-empty, and
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that the only format change is frame 0)
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Using C++
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These handlers don't actually need to be implemented using C++; it
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was just easier that way.
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Installing your handler:
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For your handler to be found, it needs to have the appropriate
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entries in the registration database.
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Compression DLLs
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When you call AVIMakeCompressedStream, you pass in a PAVISTREAM and
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are returned another PAVISTREAM. This new stream can be used in two
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ways: either you can read from the stream, in which case you will
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read data which is compressed from the original stream, or you can
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write to the new stream, in which case the data you write will be
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compressed and written to the original stream.
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To use the "read" method, you would use the following sequence of
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calls: (extra parameters left out because I can't remember them at
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the moment)
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AVIFileOpen(&pf, "foo.avi",...)
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AVIFileGetStream(pf, &ps, ...)
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AVIMakeCompressedStream(ps, &psC, &options, ...)
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AVIStreamReadFormat(psC, lpFormatC, &cbFormatC) // get compressed format
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for (loop through frames)
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AVIStreamRead(psC, frame, ....) // read compressed frames
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To use the "write" method:
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AVIFileOpen(&pf, "foo.avi", OF_CREATE | OF_WRITE...)
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AVIFileCreateStream(pf, &ps, &strhdr, ....)
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AVIMakeCompressedStream(ps, &psU, &options, ...)
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AVIStreamSetFormat(psU, lpFormatU, cbFormatU) // set format of data
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// to compress
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for (loop through frames)
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AVIStreamWrite(psU, frame, ....) // write uncompressed frames,
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// which will be compressed and
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// written to the file
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Using the Clipboard functions
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The clipboard functions are easy. To copy a bunch of streams to
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the clipboard, call AVIMakeFileFromStreams to bundle them up into a
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single PAVIFILE, then call AVIPutFileOnClipboard. To get data off of
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the clipboard, call AVIGetFromClipboard. To see whether any data is
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present on the clipboard, for enabling menus or such, you can just
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call AVIGetFromClipboard to see if it returns anything, and release
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any file it returns.
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