I know how to use AVAssetReader and AVAssetWriter, and have successfully used them to grab a video track from one movie and transcode it into another. However, I'd like to do this with audio as well. Do I have to create and AVAssetExportSession after I've done with the initial transcode, or is there some way to switch between tracks while in the midst of a writing session? I'd hate to have to deal with the overhead of an AVAssetExportSession.

I ask because, using the pull style method - (while ([assetWriterInput isReadyForMoreMediaData]) {...} - assumes one track only. How could it be used for more than one track, i.e. both an audio and a video track?

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2 Answers

Have you tried using two AVAssetWriterInputs and pushing the samples through a worker queue? Here is a rough sketch.

processing_queue = dispatch_queue_create("com.mydomain.gcdqueue.mediaprocessor", NULL);

[videoAVAssetWriterInput requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:myInputSerialQueue usingBlock:^{
    dispatch_asyc(processing_queue, ^{process video});
}];

[audioAVAssetWriterInput requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:myInputSerialQueue usingBlock:^{
    dispatch_asyc(processing_queue, ^{process audio});
}];
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Thanks for the suggestion. I've tried it, but couldn't figure out how to properly end the writing session. With one track, I just see if copyNextSampleBuffer returns empty, then end the session. With multiple tracks, I tried creating a flag for when the audio or video was done, and if both were complete I would end the session. However, even though I did a check for the asset reader status being AVAssetReaderStatusReading, I kept getting the error: [AVAssetReaderTrackOutput copyNextSampleBuffer] cannot copy next sample buffer unless the asset reader is in the 'reading' state' – akaru Mar 15 '11 at 8:24
I will bet testing a strategy much like this in the near future. If I find a solution I will post back. – Steve McFarlin Mar 15 '11 at 20:24
Are you calling [AVAssetWriterInput markAsFinished]; in your requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue method? I would not call that method at all, but rather call finishWriting on the AVAssetWriter when everything is complete. – Steve McFarlin Mar 22 '11 at 19:07
sorry for the late reply, I wasn't notified of the comment. I only call finishWriting, just as you're doing. – akaru Apr 7 '11 at 5:26
By the way, your "'reading' state" error may actually be a codec issue. If the inputs and outputs are not compatible formats that's the way it will sometimes surface. – phopkins Apr 9 '11 at 1:26
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AVAssetWriter will automatically interleave requests on its associated AVAssetWriterInputs in order to integrate different tracks into the output file. Just add an AVAssetWriterInput for each of the tracks that you have, and then call requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:usingBlock: on each of your AVAssetWriterInputs.

Here's a method I have that calls requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:usingBlock:. I call this method from a loop over the number of output/input pairs I have. (A separate method is good both for code readability and also because, unlike a loop, each call sets up a separate stack frame for the block.)

You only need one dispatch_queue_t and can reuse it for all of the tracks. Note that you definitely should not call dispatch_async from your block, because requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:usingBlock: expects the block to, well, block until it has filled in as much data as the AVAssetWriterInput will take. You don't want to return before then.

- (void)requestMediaDataForTrack:(int)i {
  AVAssetReaderOutput *output = [[_reader outputs] objectAtIndex:i];
  AVAssetWriterInput *input = [[_writer inputs] objectAtIndex:i];

  [input requestMediaDataWhenReadyOnQueue:_processingQueue usingBlock:
    ^{
      [self retain];
      while ([input isReadyForMoreMediaData]) {
        CMSampleBufferRef sampleBuffer;
        if ([_reader status] == AVAssetReaderStatusReading &&
            (sampleBuffer = [output copyNextSampleBuffer])) {

          BOOL result = [input appendSampleBuffer:sampleBuffer];
          CFRelease(sampleBuffer);

          if (!result) {
            [_reader cancelReading];
            break;
          }
        } else {
          [input markAsFinished];

          switch ([_reader status]) {
            case AVAssetReaderStatusReading:
              // the reader has more for other tracks, even if this one is done
              break;

            case AVAssetReaderStatusCompleted:
              // your method for when the conversion is done
              // should call finishWriting on the writer
              [self readingCompleted];
              break;

            case AVAssetReaderStatusCancelled:
              [_writer cancelWriting];
              [_delegate converterDidCancel:self];
              break;

            case AVAssetReaderStatusFailed:
              [_writer cancelWriting];
              break;
          }

          break;
        }
      }
    }
  ];
}
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