GPAC Project on Advanced Content

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GPAC
GPAC.Logo.jpg
GPAC Multimedia Open Source Project
Developer Jean Le Feuvre, People@GPAC[1][2]
Written in C
OS family Multimedia framework
Working state Current
Source model Open source
Initial release 2003; 21 years ago (2003)[3]
Latest release 0.5.0 / 21 May 2012; 11 years ago (2012-05-21)
Latest preview 0.5.1 / 2014; 10 years ago (2014)[4][5]
Marketing target MP4, DASH, Mobile
Platforms Cross-platform
Default user interface CLI, GUI, plugins
License LGPL v2 and later
Official website gpac.io

GPAC Project on Advanced Content (GPAC, a recursive acronym) is an implementation of the MPEG-4 Systems standard written in ANSI C. GPAC provides tools for media playback, vector graphics and 3D rendering, MPEG-4 authoring and distribution.[6]

GPAC provides three sets of tools based on a core library called libgpac:

  • A multimedia player, cross-platform command-line based MP4Client or with a GUI Osmo4
  • A multimedia packager, MP4Box
  • Some server tools, around multiplexing and streaming (under development)

GPAC is cross-platform. It is written in (almost 100% ANSI) C for portability reasons, attempting to keep the memory footprint as low as possible. It is currently running under Windows, Linux, Solaris, Windows CE (SmartPhone, PocketPC 2002/2003), iOS, Android, Embedded Linux (familiar 8, GPE) and recent Symbian OS systems.

The project is intended for a wide audience ranging from end-users or content creators with development skills who want to experiment the new standards for interactive technologies or want to convert files for mobile devices, to developers who need players and/or server for multimedia streaming applications.

The GPAC framework is being developed at École nationale supérieure des télécommunications (ENST) as part of research work on digital media.

GPAC and standards

GPAC has roots in a New York city startup 1999.[7] As an open-source project GPAC officially started in 2003 with the initial goal to develop from scratch, in ANSI C, clean software compliant to the MPEG-4 Systems standard, a small and flexible alternative to the MPEG-4 reference software.[3] It is actually licensed under LGPL.

In parallel, the project has evolved and now supports many other multimedia standards, with some good support for X3D, W3C SVG Tiny 1.2, and OMA/3GPP/ISMA and MPEG Dynamic Adaptive Streaming over HTTP (MPEG-DASH) features. 3D support is available on embedded platforms through OpenGL-ES.

The MPEG-DASH feature can be used to reconstruct .mp4 files from (e.g., YouTube) videos streamed and cached in this format.[8] Various research projects used or use GPAC.[9] Since 2013 GPAC Licensing offers business support and (closed source) licenses.[10]

Features

Packaging Multimedia Content

GPAC features encoders and multiplexers, publishing and content distribution tools for MP4 files and many tools for scene descriptions (BIFS/VRML/X3D converters, SWF/BIFS, SVG/BIFS, etc.…). MP4Box provides all these tools in a single command-line application. Current supported features are:[11]

  • MP4/3GP Conversion from MP3, AVI, MPEG-2 TS, MPEG-PS, AAC, H263, H264, AMR, and many others,
  • 3GPP DIMS Packaging from SVG tiny 1.2 files,[12]
  • File layout: fragmentation or interleaving, and cleaning,
  • File hinting for RTP/RTSP and QTSS/DSS servers (MPEG-4/ISMA/3GP/ 3GP2 files),
  • File splitting by size or time, extraction from file and file concatenation,
  • XML information dumping for MP4 and RTP hint tracks,
  • Media Track extractions,
  • ISMA E&A encryption and decryption,
  • 3GPP timed text tools (SUB/SRT/TTXT/TeXML), VobSub import/export,
  • BIFS codec and scene conversion between MP4, BT and XMT-A,
  • LASeR codec and scene conversion between MP4, SAF, SVG and XSR (XML LASeR),
  • XML scene statistics for BIFS scene (BT, XMT-A and MP4),
  • Conversion to and from BT, XMT-A, WRL, X3D and X3DV with support for gzip.

Playing Multimedia Content

GPAC supports many protocols and standards, among which:[11]

  • BIFS scenes (2D, 3D and mixed 2D/3D scenes),
  • VRML 2.0 (VRML97) scenes (without GEO or NURBS extensions),
  • X3D scenes (not complete) in X3D (XML) and X3DV (VRML) formats,
  • SVG Tiny 1.2 scenes (including packaged in 3GP DIMS files),[12]
  • LASeR and SAF (partial) support,
  • Progressive loading/rendering of SVG, X3D and XMT files,[12]
  • HTTP reading of all scene descriptions,
  • GZIP supported for all textual formats of MPEG4/X3D/VRML/SVG,
  • MP4 and 3GPP file reading (local & http),
  • MP3 and AAC files (local & http) and HTTP streaming (ShoutCast/ICEcast radios),
  • Most common media codecs for image, audio and video,
  • Most common media containers,
  • 3GPP Timed Text / MPEG-4 Streaming Text,
  • MPEG-2 TS demultiplexer (local/UDP/RTP) with DVB support (Linux only),
  • Streaming support through RTP/RTCP (unicast and multicast) and RTSP/SDP,
  • Plugins for Mozilla (osmozilla, Win32 and Linux) and Internet Explorer (GPAX, Win32 and PPC 2003).

Streaming Multimedia Content

As of version 0.4.5, GPAC has some experimental server-side and streaming tools:[11]

  • MP4/3GP file RTP streamer (unicast and multicast),
  • RTP streamer with service timeslicing (DVB-H) simulation,
  • MPEG-2 TS broadcaster using MP4/3GP files or RTP streams as inputs,
  • BIFS RTP broadcaster tool performing live encoding and RandomAccessPoints generation.

People involved

The project is hosted at ENST, a leading French engineering school also known as Télécom ParisTech. Current main contributors of GPAC are:[2]

Other (current or past) contributors from ENST are:[2]

  • Pierre Souchay
  • Jean-Claude Moissinac[1][12]
  • Jean-Claude Dufourd
  • Benoit Pellan
  • Philippe de Cuetos

Additionally, GPAC is used at ENST for pedagogical purposes. Students regularly participate in the development of the project.[2]

References

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  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 12.4 12.5 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links