FFmpeg's bug/feature request tracker manual ================================================= Overview: --------- FFmpeg uses Trac for tracking issues, new issues and changes to existing issues can be done through a web interface. Issues can be different kinds of things we want to keep track of but that do not belong into the source tree itself. This includes bug reports, feature requests and license violations. We might add more items to this list in the future, so feel free to propose a new `type of issue' on the ffmpeg-devel mailing list if you feel it is worth tracking. It is possible to subscribe to individual issues by adding yourself to the Cc list or to subscribe to the ffmpeg-trac mailing list which receives a mail for every change to every issue. (the above does all work already after light testing) The subscription URL for the ffmpeg-trac list is: https://lists.ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-trac The URL of the webinterface of the tracker is: https://trac.ffmpeg.org Type: ----- art Artwork such as photos, music, banners, and logos. bug / defect An error, flaw, mistake, failure, or fault in FFmpeg or libav* that prevents it from behaving as intended. feature request / enhancement Request of support for encoding or decoding of a new codec, container or variant. Request of support for more, less or plain different output or behavior where the current implementation cannot be considered wrong. license violation Ticket to keep track of (L)GPL violations of ffmpeg by others. sponsoring request Developer requests for hardware, software, specifications, money, refunds, etc. task A task/reminder such as setting up a FATE client, adding filters to Trac, etc. Priority: --------- critical Bugs about data loss and security issues. No feature request can be critical. important Bugs which make FFmpeg unusable for a significant number of users. Examples here might be completely broken MPEG-4 decoding or a build issue on Linux. While broken 4xm decoding or a broken OS/2 build would not be important, the separation to normal is somewhat fuzzy. For feature requests this priority would be used for things many people want. Regressions also should be marked as important, regressions are bugs that don't exist in a past revision or another branch. normal Default setting. Use this if the bug does not match the other priorities or if you are unsure of what priority to choose. minor Bugs about things like spelling errors, "mp2" instead of "mp3" being shown and such. Feature requests about things few people want or which do not make a big difference. wish Something that is desirable to have but that there is no urgency at all to implement, e.g. something completely cosmetic like a website restyle or a personalized doxy template or the FFmpeg logo. This priority is not valid for bugs. Status: ------- new initial state open intermediate states closed final state Analyzed flag: -------------- Bugs which have been analyzed and where it is understood what causes them and which exact chain of events triggers them. This analysis should be available as a message in the bug report. Note, do not change the status to analyzed without also providing a clear and understandable analysis. This state implicates that the bug either has been reproduced or that reproduction is not needed as the bug is already understood. Type/Status: ---------- */new Initial state of new bugs and feature requests submitted by users. */open Issues which have been briefly looked at and which did not look outright invalid. This implicates that no real more detailed state applies yet. Conversely, the more detailed states below implicate that the issue has been briefly looked at. */closed/duplicate Bugs or feature requests which are duplicates. Note, if you mark something as duplicate, do not forget setting the superseder so bug reports are properly linked. */closed/invalid Bugs caused by user errors, random ineligible or otherwise nonsense stuff. */closed/needs_more_info Issues for which some information has been requested by the developers, but which has not been provided by anyone within reasonable time. bug/closed/fixed Bugs which have to the best of our knowledge been fixed. bug/closed/wontfix Bugs which we will not fix. Possible reasons include legality, high complexity for the sake of supporting obscure corner cases, speed loss for similarly esoteric purposes, et cetera. This also means that we would reject a patch. If we are just too lazy to fix a bug then the correct state is open and unassigned. Closed means that the case is closed which is not the case if we are just waiting for a patch. bug/closed/works_for_me Bugs for which sufficient information was provided to reproduce but reproduction failed - that is the code seems to work correctly to the best of our knowledge. feature_request/closed/fixed Feature requests which have been implemented. feature_request/closed/wontfix Feature requests which will not be implemented. The reasons here could be legal, philosophical or others. Note2, if you provide the requested info do not forget to remove the needs_more_info resolution. Component: ---------- avcodec issues in libavcodec/* avdevice issues in libavdevice/* avfilter issues in libavfilter/* avformat issues in libavformat/* avutil issues in libavutil/* build system issues in or related to configure/Makefile documentation issues in or related to doc/* ffmpeg issues in or related to ffmpeg.c ffplay issues in or related to ffplay.c ffprobe issues in or related to ffprobe.c postproc issues in libpostproc/* swresample issues in libswresample/* swscale issues in libswscale/* trac issues related to our issue tracker undetermined default component; choose this if unsure website issues related to the website wiki issues related to the wiki