1 | <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> |
---|
2 | <html> |
---|
3 | <head> |
---|
4 | |
---|
5 | <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-15"/> |
---|
6 | <title>Ogg Documentation</title> |
---|
7 | |
---|
8 | <style type="text/css"> |
---|
9 | body { |
---|
10 | margin: 0 18px 0 18px; |
---|
11 | padding-bottom: 30px; |
---|
12 | font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; |
---|
13 | color: #333333; |
---|
14 | font-size: .8em; |
---|
15 | } |
---|
16 | |
---|
17 | a { |
---|
18 | color: #3366cc; |
---|
19 | } |
---|
20 | |
---|
21 | img { |
---|
22 | border: 0; |
---|
23 | } |
---|
24 | |
---|
25 | #xiphlogo { |
---|
26 | margin: 30px 0 16px 0; |
---|
27 | } |
---|
28 | |
---|
29 | #content p { |
---|
30 | line-height: 1.4; |
---|
31 | } |
---|
32 | |
---|
33 | h1, h1 a, h2, h2 a, h3, h3 a { |
---|
34 | font-weight: bold; |
---|
35 | color: #ff9900; |
---|
36 | margin: 1.3em 0 8px 0; |
---|
37 | } |
---|
38 | |
---|
39 | h1 { |
---|
40 | font-size: 1.3em; |
---|
41 | } |
---|
42 | |
---|
43 | h2 { |
---|
44 | font-size: 1.2em; |
---|
45 | } |
---|
46 | |
---|
47 | h3 { |
---|
48 | font-size: 1.1em; |
---|
49 | } |
---|
50 | |
---|
51 | li { |
---|
52 | line-height: 1.4; |
---|
53 | } |
---|
54 | |
---|
55 | #copyright { |
---|
56 | margin-top: 30px; |
---|
57 | line-height: 1.5em; |
---|
58 | text-align: center; |
---|
59 | font-size: .8em; |
---|
60 | color: #888888; |
---|
61 | clear: both; |
---|
62 | } |
---|
63 | </style> |
---|
64 | |
---|
65 | </head> |
---|
66 | |
---|
67 | <body> |
---|
68 | |
---|
69 | <div id="xiphlogo"> |
---|
70 | <a href="http://www.xiph.org/"><img src="fish_xiph_org.png" alt="Fish Logo and Xiph.org"/></a> |
---|
71 | </div> |
---|
72 | |
---|
73 | <h1>Ogg logical and physical bitstream overview</h1> |
---|
74 | |
---|
75 | <h2>Ogg bitstreams</h2> |
---|
76 | |
---|
77 | <p>Ogg codecs use octet vectors of raw, compressed data |
---|
78 | (<em>packets</em>). These compressed packets do not have any |
---|
79 | high-level structure or boundary information; strung together, they |
---|
80 | appear to be streams of random bytes with no landmarks.</p> |
---|
81 | |
---|
82 | <p>Raw packets may be used directly by transport mechanisms that provide |
---|
83 | their own framing and packet-separation mechanisms (such as UDP |
---|
84 | datagrams). For stream based storage (such as files) and transport |
---|
85 | (such as TCP streams or pipes), Vorbis and other future Ogg codecs use |
---|
86 | the Ogg bitstream format to provide framing/sync, sync recapture |
---|
87 | after error, landmarks during seeking, and enough information to |
---|
88 | properly separate data back into packets at the original packet |
---|
89 | boundaries without relying on decoding to find packet boundaries.</p> |
---|
90 | |
---|
91 | <h2>Logical and physical bitstreams</h2> |
---|
92 | |
---|
93 | <p>Raw packets are grouped and encoded into contiguous pages of |
---|
94 | structured bitstream data called <em>logical bitstreams</em>. A |
---|
95 | logical bitstream consists of pages, in order, belonging to a single |
---|
96 | codec instance. Each page is a self contained entity (although it is |
---|
97 | possible that a packet may be split and encoded across one or more |
---|
98 | pages); that is, the page decode mechanism is designed to recognize, |
---|
99 | verify and handle single pages at a time from the overall bitstream.</p> |
---|
100 | |
---|
101 | <p>Multiple logical bitstreams can be combined (with restrictions) into a |
---|
102 | single <em>physical bitstream</em>. A physical bitstream consists of |
---|
103 | multiple logical bitstreams multiplexed at the page level and may |
---|
104 | include a 'meta-header' at the beginning of the multiplexed logical |
---|
105 | stream that serves as identification magic. Whole pages are taken in |
---|
106 | order from multiple logical bitstreams and combined into a single |
---|
107 | physical stream of pages. The decoder reconstructs the original |
---|
108 | logical bitstreams from the physical bitstream by taking the pages in |
---|
109 | order from the physical bitstream and redirecting them into the |
---|
110 | appropriate logical decoding entity. The simplest physical bitstream |
---|
111 | is a single, unmultiplexed logical bitstream with no meta-header; this |
---|
112 | is referred to as a 'degenerate stream'.</p> |
---|
113 | |
---|
114 | <p><a href="framing.html">Ogg Logical Bitstream Framing</a> discusses |
---|
115 | the page format of an Ogg bitstream, the packet coding process |
---|
116 | and logical bitstreams in detail. The remainder of this document |
---|
117 | specifies requirements for constructing finished, physical Ogg |
---|
118 | bitstreams.</p> |
---|
119 | |
---|
120 | <h2>Mapping Restrictions</h2> |
---|
121 | |
---|
122 | <p>Logical bitstreams may not be mapped/multiplexed into physical |
---|
123 | bitstreams without restriction. Here we discuss design restrictions |
---|
124 | on Ogg physical bitstreams in general, mostly to introduce |
---|
125 | design rationale. Each 'media' format defines its own (generally more |
---|
126 | restrictive) mapping. An 'Ogg Vorbis Audio Bitstream', for example, has a |
---|
127 | specific physical bitstream structure. |
---|
128 | An 'Ogg A/V' bitstream (not currently specified) will also mandate a |
---|
129 | specific, restricted physical bitstream format.</p> |
---|
130 | |
---|
131 | <h3>additional end-to-end structure</h3> |
---|
132 | |
---|
133 | <p>The <a href="framing.html">framing specification</a> defines |
---|
134 | 'beginning of stream' and 'end of stream' page markers via a header |
---|
135 | flag (it is possible for a stream to consist of a single page). A |
---|
136 | stream always consists of an integer number of pages, an easy |
---|
137 | requirement given the variable size nature of pages.</p> |
---|
138 | |
---|
139 | <p>In addition to the header flag marking the first and last pages of a |
---|
140 | logical bitstream, the first page of an Ogg bitstream obeys |
---|
141 | additional restrictions. Each individual media mapping specifies its |
---|
142 | own implementation details regarding these restrictions.</p> |
---|
143 | |
---|
144 | <p>The first page of a logical Ogg bitstream consists of a single, |
---|
145 | small 'initial header' packet that includes sufficient information to |
---|
146 | identify the exact CODEC type and media requirements of the logical |
---|
147 | bitstream. The intent of this restriction is to simplify identifying |
---|
148 | the bitstream type and content; for a given media type (or across all |
---|
149 | Ogg media types) we can know that we only need a small, fixed |
---|
150 | amount of data to uniquely identify the bitstream type.</p> |
---|
151 | |
---|
152 | <p>As an example, Ogg Vorbis places the name and revision of the Vorbis |
---|
153 | CODEC, the audio rate and the audio quality into this initial header, |
---|
154 | thus simplifying vastly the certain identification of an Ogg Vorbis |
---|
155 | audio bitstream.</p> |
---|
156 | |
---|
157 | <h3>sequential multiplexing (chaining)</h3> |
---|
158 | |
---|
159 | <p>The simplest form of logical bitstream multiplexing is concatenation |
---|
160 | (<em>chaining</em>). Complete logical bitstreams are strung |
---|
161 | one-after-another in order. The bitstreams do not overlap; the final |
---|
162 | page of a given logical bitstream is immediately followed by the |
---|
163 | initial page of the next. Chaining is the only logical->physical |
---|
164 | mapping allowed by Ogg Vorbis.</p> |
---|
165 | |
---|
166 | <p>Each chained logical bitstream must have a unique serial number within |
---|
167 | the scope of the physical bitstream.</p> |
---|
168 | |
---|
169 | <h3>concurrent multiplexing (grouping)</h3> |
---|
170 | |
---|
171 | <p>Logical bitstreams may also be multiplexed 'in parallel' |
---|
172 | (<em>grouped</em>). An example of grouping would be to allow |
---|
173 | streaming of separate audio and video streams, using different codecs |
---|
174 | and different logical bitstreams, in the same physical bitstream. |
---|
175 | Whole pages from multiple logical bitstreams are mixed together.</p> |
---|
176 | |
---|
177 | <p>The initial pages of each logical bitstream must appear first; the |
---|
178 | media mapping specifies the order of the initial pages. For example, |
---|
179 | Ogg A/V will eventually specify an Ogg video bitstream with |
---|
180 | audio. The mapping may specify that the physical bitstream must begin |
---|
181 | with the initial page of a logical video bitstream, followed by the |
---|
182 | initial page of an audio stream. Unlike initial pages, terminal pages |
---|
183 | for the logical bitstreams need not all occur contiguously (although a |
---|
184 | specific media mapping may require this; it is not mandated by the |
---|
185 | generic Ogg stream spec). Terminal pages may be 'nil' pages, |
---|
186 | that is, pages containing no content but simply a page header with |
---|
187 | position information and the 'last page of bitstream' flag set in the |
---|
188 | page header.</p> |
---|
189 | |
---|
190 | <p>Each grouped bitstream must have a unique serial number within the |
---|
191 | scope of the physical bitstream.</p> |
---|
192 | |
---|
193 | <h3>sequential and concurrent multiplexing</h3> |
---|
194 | |
---|
195 | <p>Groups of concurrently multiplexed bitstreams may be chained |
---|
196 | consecutively. Such a physical bitstream obeys all the rules of both |
---|
197 | grouped and chained multiplexed streams; the groups, when unchained , |
---|
198 | must stand on their own as a valid concurrently multiplexed |
---|
199 | bitstream.</p> |
---|
200 | |
---|
201 | <h3>multiplexing example</h3> |
---|
202 | |
---|
203 | <p>Below, we present an example of a grouped and chained bitstream:</p> |
---|
204 | |
---|
205 | <p><img src="stream.png" alt="stream"/></p> |
---|
206 | |
---|
207 | <p>In this example, we see pages from five total logical bitstreams |
---|
208 | multiplexed into a physical bitstream. Note the following |
---|
209 | characteristics:</p> |
---|
210 | |
---|
211 | <ol> |
---|
212 | <li>Grouped bitstreams begin together; all of the initial pages |
---|
213 | must appear before any data pages. When concurrently multiplexed |
---|
214 | groups are chained, the new group does not begin until all the |
---|
215 | bitstreams in the previous group have terminated.</li> |
---|
216 | |
---|
217 | <li>The pages of concurrently multiplexed bitstreams need not conform |
---|
218 | to a regular order; the only requirement is that page <tt>n</tt> of a |
---|
219 | logical bitstream follow page <tt>n-1</tt> in the physical bitstream. |
---|
220 | There are no restrictions on intervening pages belonging to other |
---|
221 | logical bitstreams. (Tying page appearance to bitrate demands is one |
---|
222 | logical strategy, ie, the page appears at the chronological point |
---|
223 | where decode requires more information).</li> |
---|
224 | </ol> |
---|
225 | |
---|
226 | <div id="copyright"> |
---|
227 | The Xiph Fish Logo is a |
---|
228 | trademark (™) of Xiph.Org.<br/> |
---|
229 | |
---|
230 | These pages © 1994 - 2005 Xiph.Org. All rights reserved. |
---|
231 | </div> |
---|
232 | |
---|
233 | </body> |
---|
234 | </html> |
---|