example project: 19.04 Multitrack compositing still broken: differs from all previous Kdenlive versions back to 15 and before
alcinos
french.ebook.lover at gmail.com
Thu May 9 23:02:08 BST 2019
Le jeu. 9 mai 2019 à 23:40, Jacob Kauffmann <jacob at nerdonthestreet.com> a
écrit :
> As another user, I'd just like to say that Farid's response here was
> fairly reassuring at least, and I'm glad Harald started this thread because
> I got to read Farid's response. I usually can't make the Cafe's, and I
> haven't found them super productive when I have listened in on them, but I
> think the Kdenlive "community" (userbase) is starting to reach the size
> where devs will see angry users when things break. I know I've personally
> thought to myself "what in the world are the developers doing?" several
> times since upgrading to the stable refactored version, but as long as they
> follow up on what they're saying in terms of continuing to polish (rather
> than calling this "finished"), I have faith the software will be better for
> it and I'm very thankful to the developers for spending their time and
> effort on this important project.
>
Thank you for your kind words.
Change always generate friction. There are bugs that will creep in, no
matter how careful we are, but more fundamentally, major changes will have
impact on people's habits, and that can be frustrating ("but the old way
worked for me" "I don't have time to learn a new workflow, I need to finish
this project soon").
We hope that the users cope with us and eventually find themselves more
productive, because this is obviously the goal driving our decisions, with
a lot of consulting from the community. Obviously, we are human, thus make
mistakes and we will always stay open to feedback and incorporate it if it
makes sense.
The compositing bug, while frustrating, falls into the "bug" category and
not in the "crazy stupid changes these morons did just to blow up my
workflow and get me insane" category (notice the slight nuance here). As we
speak, this bug as already been fixed by JB, who is, as always, super
reactive.
>
> With regards to changes, nobody is stopping anyone from using old versions
> of the AppImage or other installations, so if the current "stable" is not
> stable enough (which is always unfortunate to acknowledge, but is often the
> case with Kdenlive), people can always keep using an earlier version if
> it's working for them. Personally, I've found that the new version is
> *incredibly* slow with long (45-minute+) clips in the timeline, along
> with a few other issues, but the much-improved stability of the keyframing
> system and the lower criticality of timeline corruption is worth putting up
> with the quirks for the time being, in my case.
>
Could you describe specifically what is "slow" here? The preview? Moving
clips around?
As for the "few other issues", I invite you to submit them here
https://invent.kde.org/kde/kdenlive/issues. We can only fix issues if we
are aware of them :)
>
> Older AppImages are still available for download right alongside the
> newest one, all the way back to 16.12.2:
> https://files.kde.org/kdenlive/release/ (Are the regressions worth the
> improvements? Decide for yourself and pick your poison.)
>
> - Jacob Kauffmann
>
> On Thu, May 9, 2019, at 4:06 PM, harald.albrecht wrote:
>
> I notice that my reason for speaking up is unfortunately not getting
> through, and that is, in my opinion, due to solely focusing on the
> developers refactoring task and the primary goal of stability, where
> stability has different semantica for devs and for different users. As a
> user I value stability across releases, that functions work as learnt and
> used. Of course, values differ.
>
> Any tonal issues are easily solved now, as I stop stepping forward here or
> engaging again, raising issues and asking for reason why things get
> changed. My need for a NLVE is as described and this doesn't seem to be
> Kdenlive's roadmap. That's fine, so let's end this here. There's no common
> understanding and no sign that it might happen, no pun. It's your community.
>
> Harald.
>
>
> -------- Ursprüngliche Nachricht --------
> Von: farid abdelnour <snd.noise at gmail.com>
> Datum: 09.05.19 21:00 (GMT+01:00)
> An: Kdenlive <kdenlive at kde.org>
> Betreff: Re: example project: 19.04 Multitrack compositing still broken:
> differs from all previous Kdenlive versions back to 15 and before
>
> Hi Harald
>
> Let me start by saying how much I think you are a valuable member to this
> community (see the Toolbox among many other things) and I think the devs
> feel the same. I just cannot but help to dislike your tone. Although I can
> TOTALLY understand your frustration with seeing your daily driver not work.
> Maybe because i follow the difficulties of develoipment on a day to day
> basis...
>
> Em qua, 8 de mai de 2019 às 14:43, Harald Albrecht <
> harald.albrecht at gmx.net> escreveu:
>
> This is totally frustrating as the new timeline doesn't allow the same
> multitrack compositing as the old does. Things that worked for several
> years in Kdenlive cannot be done anymore in 19.04. Nada. Don't work. And
> this is not just an "import problem", it also happens when you create the
> same project anew in 19.04. What reason is there to completely change the
> track compositing mechanics during refactoring? Please give me some clue
> why things get completely broken for what is called the new "stable 19.04"
> Kdenlive.
>
>
> We really tested as much as we could the code, but weren't able to catch
> everything, this is why in the release notes we stated that we will focus
> this whole 19.04 cycle to finish polishing things. Compositing somehow
> broke during this code change, I didn't notice that during my tests, but as
> far as I know JB already fixed it. Unfortunately I cannot give you a clue
> as to why it happened, but it did and it is now fixed. The good thing now
> is that fixing things is much quicker.
>
>
> Alas, here's what is happing; project is attached. And no, this ain't a
> superficial and artificial project to annoy devs. This is the simplified
> and neutered version of what I was doing in many of my daytime
> company-internal video projects. And I have to admit that there's now
> almost no day where I don't seriously consider throwing the towel and
> shelling out money for a commercial video editor for Linux. It's not that I
> haven't raised several important issues during the refactor branch with
> existing project. All I got was "oh, importing existing projects isn't of
> any importance to us". Well, you could have used that to quickly gather
> tons of real-world tests instead of a small set of artifical unit tests.
> And to add more insult, I get told during café that my Kubuntu disco OS
> setup "must be special" when things break, so it's obviously my fault.
>
> During the process the focus was on stabilizing things. Now is the time to
> focus of fixing stuff that broke during the code change, that is probably
> why you might have gotten such answer (don't know really). About the thing
> being "your fault" it was a community member trying to help out as he
> couldn't reproduce your issue. I don't think the intention was to blame you
> or to discredit you. It was in good faith.
>
>
> I already experienced a rough transit during those days back of 0.9x to
> 1.0/15.xx -- and I invested lot of patience as did JBM with losts of
> real-world examples that broke during transition, the same bugs getting
> squashed and returning multiple times during transit. So, I understand how
> difficult such transits are. And I perfectly understand JBM and the other
> devs to be done with such difficult and exhausting transitions as a major
> refactoring. Been there, lived through that. But there was a different
> attitude then.
>
> What, to my personal experience, is different this time is that I
> experience more or less an attitude getting more and more bordering on what
> feels to me like "get off my lawn". Not least reaching peak in that ugly
> "importing existing project isn't of any importance yet" some weeks ago
> when I raised my issues. Honestly, I don't feel any need to file Kdenlive
> gitlab issues after that treatment even up to the café. I know from my
> daytime job the importance to take user feedback and bug reports very
> seriously, more so when refactoring a product that worked sufficiently good
> for the existing user base (notwithstanding that it needs refactoring
> nevertheless).
>
> I really cannot tell when you felt a "get off my lawn" attitude, most of
> the café yesterday was spent to hear your feedback and JBM fixed many
> issues as you were reporting them.
>
> I here state for you and everyone reading that we are a community and not
> a one person project. We value and want to listen feedback from everyone.
> At least I hope you see this from the website posts, the cafés and
> everything else...
>
> Just for the record, I'm also doing development during my daytime, to
> verify my architectural suggestions, so prototype novel ideas, and to keep
> knowing what's like in a rapidly changing world of software. I'm not
> talking ex cathedra, I leave that to others.
>
>
> No one from the devs team feels that!
>
>
> ***
>
> This is the minified example of a typical track compositing I use very
> often. Track compositing is set to "high quality". So, some video
> "background" on V1 (to use new terminology). I then need to focus viewers
> on a certain area in this background video by darkening the unimportant
> parts in the video: using a full-frame gray matte on V2, from which I cut
> out the region of visual focus using a "cutout title clip" on V3. V3->V2 is
> composite&transform with "destination out".
>
>
> The V2->V1 composite&transform is just for a fade in with an alpha ramp
> from 0% to 100%.
>
> Now, on top of this is some text with a title bar, on V5 and V4
> respectively. V5 and V4 each get faded in with 0%->100%, and composited
> onto V1, the bottommost background/video track. As you can see here, this
> works as expected: the title and its bar slowly fade in, and also the matte
> with its cutout also correctly fades in. Also, at the end of the
> transitions for V5 and V4, the text and its title bar correctly reach 100%.
> Keep this in mind for comparison with the new refactored behavior.
>
> alpha 50%
>
> alpha 100%
>
> So, no rocket science here. Just plain multi-track compositing to get
> things done.
>
> Head over to 19.04, same project loaded; but you achieve the same results
> when you recreate from scratch. It doesn't look like an import issue, and
> in fact I've found out when working on a fresh 19.04 project from scratch.
>
>
>
> alpha 50% ... seems to like fine on a first glimpse, but the compositing
> is already different, so compare the last frame of the fade in c&t.
>
> alpha 100% ... no, this doesn't make sense at all.
>
> First frame after the V4/V5 transitions ended: ... this is correct, so
> the previous frame should have (almost) reached this.
>
> I've tried this on this day's kdenlive-19.04.1-dfe2c78-x86_64.appimage
> <https://binary-factory.kde.org/job/Kdenlive_Nightly_Appimage_Build/lastSuccessfulBuild/artifact/kdenlive-19.04.1-dfe2c78-x86_64.appimage>
> .
>
> So why did you change multitrack timeline compositing? What compelling
> reason is there to do so? And what sense does it make considering my
> example showing that the explicit transitions behave totally different from
> the implicit transitions, as opposed to behavior of the long-term stable
> Kdenlive series?
>
> A stopgap measure is to throw in lots of unnecessary transitions to
> basically override the implicit transitions almost everywhere. But
> seriously, that cannot be a rationale for user experience for a refactored
> product, can it?
>
>
> I am sure the devs will fix everything you point to that is broken, I just
> ask you to have (more) patience if things sometimes don't work. If you have
> energy report themWe are gettng there!
>
>
>
> Harald
>
>
> Cheers :D
>
>
> --
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