__init__.py 6.02 KB
Newer Older
1
2
import torch

Zhicheng Yan's avatar
Zhicheng Yan committed
3
from ._video_opt import (
4
5
6
    Timebase,
    VideoMetaData,
    _HAS_VIDEO_OPT,
7
    _probe_video_from_file,
8
9
    _probe_video_from_memory,
    _read_video_from_file,
Zhicheng Yan's avatar
Zhicheng Yan committed
10
    _read_video_from_memory,
11
    _read_video_timestamps_from_file,
Zhicheng Yan's avatar
Zhicheng Yan committed
12
    _read_video_timestamps_from_memory,
13
14
15
16
17
)
from .video import (
    read_video,
    read_video_timestamps,
    write_video,
Zhicheng Yan's avatar
Zhicheng Yan committed
18
)
19
20
from .image import (
    decode_image,
So Uchida's avatar
So Uchida committed
21
22
    decode_jpeg,
    decode_png,
23
24
    encode_jpeg,
    encode_png,
So Uchida's avatar
So Uchida committed
25
26
27
28
    read_file,
    read_image,
    write_file,
    write_jpeg,
29
    write_png,
30
31
)

32

33
if _HAS_VIDEO_OPT:
34

35
36
    def _has_video_opt():
        return True
37
38


39
else:
40

41
42
    def _has_video_opt():
        return False
43
44


45
46
47
48
49
class VideoReader:
    """
    Fine-grained video-reading API.
    Supports frame-by-frame reading of various streams from a single video
    container.
50

51
    Example:
Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
52
        The following examples creates a :mod:`VideoReader` object, seeks into 2s
53
        point, and returns a single frame::
54

55
56
57
58
59
            import torchvision
            video_path = "path_to_a_test_video"
            reader = torchvision.io.VideoReader(video_path, "video")
            reader.seek(2.0)
            frame = next(reader)
Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
60
61
62
63

        :mod:`VideoReader` implements the iterable API, which makes it suitable to
        using it in conjunction with :mod:`itertools` for more advanced reading.
        As such, we can use a :mod:`VideoReader` instance inside for loops::
64

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
65
66
67
68
69
70
            reader.seek(2)
            for frame in reader:
                frames.append(frame['data'])
            # additionally, `seek` implements a fluent API, so we can do
            for frame in reader.seek(2):
                frames.append(frame['data'])
71

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
72
73
        With :mod:`itertools`, we can read all frames between 2 and 5 seconds with the
        following code::
74

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
75
76
            for frame in itertools.takewhile(lambda x: x['pts'] <= 5, reader.seek(2)):
                frames.append(frame['data'])
77

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
78
79
        and similarly, reading 10 frames after the 2s timestamp can be achieved
        as follows::
80

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
            for frame in itertools.islice(reader.seek(2), 10):
                frames.append(frame['data'])

    .. note::

        Each stream descriptor consists of two parts: stream type (e.g. 'video') and
        a unique stream id (which are determined by the video encoding).
        In this way, if the video contaner contains multiple
        streams of the same type, users can acces the one they want.
        If only stream type is passed, the decoder auto-detects first stream of that type.
91

92
    Args:
93

94
        path (string): Path to the video file in supported format
95

Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
96
97
98
        stream (string, optional): descriptor of the required stream, followed by the stream id,
            in the format ``{stream_type}:{stream_id}``. Defaults to ``"video:0"``.
            Currently available options include ``['video', 'audio']``
99
    """
100

101
    def __init__(self, path, stream="video"):
102
        if not _has_video_opt():
103
104
105
106
107
108
            raise RuntimeError(
                "Not compiled with video_reader support, "
                + "to enable video_reader support, please install "
                + "ffmpeg (version 4.2 is currently supported) and"
                + "build torchvision from source."
            )
109
        self._c = torch.classes.torchvision.Video(path, stream)
110

111
    def __next__(self):
112
113
114
115
116
        """Decodes and returns the next frame of the current stream.
        Frames are encoded as a dict with mandatory
        data and pts fields, where data is a tensor, and pts is a
        presentation timestamp of the frame expressed in seconds
        as a float.
117

118
        Returns:
119
120
            (dict): a dictionary and containing decoded frame (``data``)
            and corresponding timestamp (``pts``) in seconds
121

122
123
124
125
        """
        frame, pts = self._c.next()
        if frame.numel() == 0:
            raise StopIteration
Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
126
        return {"data": frame, "pts": pts}
127

128
129
    def __iter__(self):
        return self
130

131
132
    def seek(self, time_s: float):
        """Seek within current stream.
133

134
135
        Args:
            time_s (float): seek time in seconds
136

137
138
139
140
        .. note::
            Current implementation is the so-called precise seek. This
            means following seek, call to :mod:`next()` will return the
            frame with the exact timestamp if it exists or
Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
141
            the first frame with timestamp larger than ``time_s``.
142
143
144
        """
        self._c.seek(time_s)
        return self
145

146
147
    def get_metadata(self):
        """Returns video metadata
148

149
150
151
152
        Returns:
            (dict): dictionary containing duration and frame rate for every stream
        """
        return self._c.get_metadata()
153

154
155
156
    def set_current_stream(self, stream: str):
        """Set current stream.
        Explicitly define the stream we are operating on.
157

158
        Args:
Bruno Korbar's avatar
Bruno Korbar committed
159
160
            stream (string): descriptor of the required stream. Defaults to ``"video:0"``
                Currently available stream types include ``['video', 'audio']``.
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
                Each descriptor consists of two parts: stream type (e.g. 'video') and
                a unique stream id (which are determined by video encoding).
                In this way, if the video contaner contains multiple
                streams of the same type, users can acces the one they want.
                If only stream type is passed, the decoder auto-detects first stream
                of that type and returns it.

        Returns:
            (bool): True on succes, False otherwise
        """
        return self._c.set_current_stream(stream)
172
173


174
__all__ = [
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
    "write_video",
    "read_video",
    "read_video_timestamps",
    "_read_video_from_file",
    "_read_video_timestamps_from_file",
    "_probe_video_from_file",
    "_read_video_from_memory",
    "_read_video_timestamps_from_memory",
    "_probe_video_from_memory",
    "_HAS_VIDEO_OPT",
    "_read_video_clip_from_memory",
    "_read_video_meta_data",
    "VideoMetaData",
188
    "Timebase",
189
    "decode_image",
So Uchida's avatar
So Uchida committed
190
191
    "decode_jpeg",
    "decode_png",
192
193
    "encode_jpeg",
    "encode_png",
So Uchida's avatar
So Uchida committed
194
195
196
197
    "read_file",
    "read_image",
    "write_file",
    "write_jpeg",
198
199
    "write_png",
    "Video",
200
]