Essential Video Coding

Video compression standard From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MPEG-5 Essential Video Coding (EVC), standardized as ISO/IEC 23094-1, is a video compression standard that has been completed in April 2020 by decision of MPEG Working Group 11 at its 130th meeting.[1][2][3][4]

Quick Facts Status, Year started ...
EVC / MPEG-5 Part 1
Essential Video Coding
StatusDraft
Year started2018 (Initial Requirements Document)
OrganizationISO
CommitteeMPEG
DomainVideo compression
Websitempeg.chiariglione.org/standards/mpeg-5/essential-video-coding.html
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The standard consists of a royalty-free subset and individually switchable enhancements.[2][3][5]

Concept

The publicly available requirements document[5] outlines a development process that is defensive against patent threats: Two sets of coding tools, base and enhanced, are defined:

  • The base consist of tools that were made public more than 20 years ago or for which a Type 1 declaration is received. Type 1, or option 1, means "royalty-free", in the nomenclature used in ISO documents.[6]
  • The "enhanced" set consists of 21[7] other tools which have passed an extra compression efficiency justification and which can be disabled individually.

Each of the 21 payable tools can have separately acquired and separately negotiated and separately Traded License agreements.[7] Each can be individually turned off and, when necessary, replaced by a corresponding cost free baseline profile tool. This structure makes it easy to fall back to a smaller set of tools in the future, if, for example, licensing complications occur around a specific tool, without breaking compatibility with already deployed decoders.[7]

A proposal by Samsung, Huawei and Qualcomm forms the basis of EVC.[8]

Implementations

  • XEVE (eXtra-fast Essential Video Encoder)[9] is self-described as a fast open source EVC encoder. It is written in C99 and supports both the baseline and main profiles of EVC. Its license is a custom 3-clause BSD license.
  • FFmpeg version 7.1[10][11] officially supports encoding and decoding using official external library above (for encoding) and decoder library: eXtra-fast Essential Video Decoder (XEVD).[12]

MPAI-EVC

MPAI aims to significantly enhance the performance of EVC by improving or replacing traditional tools with AI-based tools, with the goal of reaching at least 25% improvement over the baseline profile of EVC.[13][14][15]

See also

References

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