CELLAR Group

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         S. Lhomme
Internet-Draft
Intended status: Standards Track
Request for Comments: 9559
Updates: 8794                                                  M. Bunkus
Expires: 24 April 2024
Category: Standards Track
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                  D. Rice
                                                         22 October 2023
                                                              April 2024

             Matroska Media Container Format Specifications
                     draft-ietf-cellar-matroska-21

Abstract

   This document defines the Matroska audiovisual data container
   structure, including definitions of its structural elements, as well
   as its
   terminology, vocabulary, and application.

   This document updates [RFC8794] RFC 8794 to permit the use of a previously
   reserved EBML Extensible Binary Meta Language (EBML) Element ID.

Status of This Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents an Internet Standards Track document.

   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
   (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute
   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list  It represents the consensus of current Internet-
   Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid the IETF community.  It has
   received public review and has been approved for a maximum publication by the
   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
   Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of six months RFC 7841.

   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
   and how to provide feedback on it may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents obtained at any
   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

   This Internet-Draft will expire on 24 April 2024.
   https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9559.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2023 2024 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/
   license-info)
   (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the
   Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described
   in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   2.  Status of this document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7 This Document
   3.  Notation and Conventions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   4.  Matroska Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     4.1.  Principles  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     4.2.  Updates to RFC 8794 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     4.3.  Added EBML Constraints  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     4.4.  Design Rules  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     4.5.  Data Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   5.  Matroska Schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
     5.1.  Segment Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
       5.1.1.  SeekHead Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
         5.1.1.1.  Seek Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
       5.1.2.  Info Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
         5.1.2.1.  SegmentUUID Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
         5.1.2.2.  SegmentFilename Element . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
         5.1.2.3.  PrevUUID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
         5.1.2.4.  PrevFilename Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
         5.1.2.5.  NextUUID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
         5.1.2.6.  NextFilename Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
         5.1.2.7.  SegmentFamily Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
         5.1.2.8.  ChapterTranslate Element  . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
         5.1.2.9.  TimestampScale Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
         5.1.2.10. Duration Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
         5.1.2.11. DateUTC Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
         5.1.2.12. Title Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
         5.1.2.13. MuxingApp Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
         5.1.2.14. WritingApp Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
       5.1.3.  Cluster Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
         5.1.3.1.  Timestamp Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
         5.1.3.2.  Position Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
         5.1.3.3.  PrevSize Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
         5.1.3.4.  SimpleBlock Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
         5.1.3.5.  BlockGroup Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
       5.1.4.  Tracks Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
         5.1.4.1.  TrackEntry Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
       5.1.5.  Cues Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  67
         5.1.5.1.  CuePoint Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  67
       5.1.6.  Attachments Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  69
         5.1.6.1.  AttachedFile Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  69
       5.1.7.  Chapters Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  70
         5.1.7.1.  EditionEntry Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  71
       5.1.8.  Tags Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
         5.1.8.1.  Tag Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  76
   6.  Matroska Element Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  82
     6.1.  Top-Level Elements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  82
     6.2.  CRC-32  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
     6.3.  SeekHead  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
     6.4.  Cues (index)  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83 (Index)
     6.5.  Info  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  83
     6.6.  Chapters Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84
     6.7.  Attachments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84
     6.8.  Tags  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84
   7.  Matroska versioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  84 Versioning
   8.  Stream Copy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  85
   9.  DefaultDecodedFieldDuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
   10. Cluster Blocks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  86
     10.1.  Block Structure  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  87
     10.2.  SimpleBlock Structure  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  88
     10.3.  Block Lacing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  90
       10.3.1.  No lacing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  90 Lacing
       10.3.2.  Xiph lacing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  91 Lacing
       10.3.3.  EBML lacing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  92 Lacing
       10.3.4.  Fixed-size lacing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  94 Lacing
       10.3.5.  Laced Frames Timestamp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  94
     10.4.  Random Access Points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  95
   11. Timestamps  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  98
     11.1.  Timestamp Ticks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  99
       11.1.1.  Matroska Ticks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  99
       11.1.2.  Segment Ticks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  99
       11.1.3.  Track Ticks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
     11.2.  Block Timestamps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
     11.3.  TimestampScale Rounding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
   12. Language Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
   13. Country Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
   14. Encryption  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
   15. Image Presentation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
     15.1.  Cropping . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
     15.2.  Rotation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
   16. Segment Position  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
     16.1.  Segment Position Exception . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
     16.2.  Example of Segment Position  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
   17. Linked Segments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
     17.1.  Hard Linking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
     17.2.  Medium Linking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
       17.2.1.  Linked-Duration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
       17.2.2.  Linked-Edition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
   18. Track Flags . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
     18.1.  Default flag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Flag
     18.2.  Forced flag  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Flag
     18.3.  Hearing-impaired flag  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110  Hearing-Impaired Flag
     18.4.  Visual-impaired flag . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110  Visual-Impaired Flag
     18.5.  Descriptions flag  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Flag
     18.6.  Original flag  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Flag
     18.7.  Commentary flag  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110 Flag
     18.8.  Track Operation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
     18.9.  Overlay Track  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
     18.10. Multi-planar and 3D videos . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111 Videos
   19. Default track selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112 Track Selection
     19.1.  Audio Selection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
     19.2.  Subtitle selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114 Selection
   20. Chapters  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
     20.1.  EditionEntry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
       20.1.1.  EditionFlagDefault . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
       20.1.2.  Default Edition  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
       20.1.3.  EditionFlagOrdered . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
         20.1.3.1.  Ordered-Edition and Matroska Segment-Linking . . 118 Segment Linking
     20.2.  ChapterAtom  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       20.2.1.  ChapterTimeStart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       20.2.2.  ChapterTimeEnd . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       20.2.3.  Nested Chapters  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
       20.2.4.  Nested Chapters in Ordered Chapters  . . . . . . . . 120
       20.2.5.  ChapterFlagHidden  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
     20.3.  Menu features  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121 Features
     20.4.  Physical Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121
     20.5.  Chapter Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122
       20.5.1.  Example 1 : basic chaptering . . . . . . . . . . . . 122 1: Basic Chaptering
       20.5.2.  Example 2 : nested chapters  . . . . . . . . . . . . 124 2: Nested Chapters
         20.5.2.1.  The Micronauts "Bleep To Bleep"  . . . . . . . . 124
   21. Attachments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
     21.1.  Cover Art  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
     21.2.  Font files . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 128 Files
   22. Cues  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 129
     22.1.  Recommendations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
   23. Matroska Streaming  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
     23.1.  File Access  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130
     23.2.  Livestreaming  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
   24. Tags  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
     24.1.  Tags Precedence  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 132
     24.2.  Tag Levels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
   25. Implementation Recommendations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
     25.1.  Cluster  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
     25.2.  SeekHead . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
     25.3.  Optimum Layouts  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133
       25.3.1.  Optimum layout Layout for a muxer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 133 Muxer
       25.3.2.  Optimum layout Layout after editing tags  . . . . . . . . . 134 Editing Tags
       25.3.3.  Optimum layout Layout with Cues at the front  . . . . . . . 134 Front
       25.3.4.  Optimum layout Layout for livestreaming . . . . . . . . . . 134 Livestreaming
   26. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
   27. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
     27.1.  Matroska Element IDs Registry  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
     27.2.  Chapter Codec IDs Registry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 152
     27.3.  Media Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 153
       27.3.1.  For files containing video tracks  . . . . . . . . . 153 Files Containing Video Tracks
       27.3.2.  For files containing audio tracks Files Containing Audio Tracks with no video
               tracks  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 154 No Video Tracks
       27.3.3.  For files containing Files Containing a stereoscopic video track  . . 154 Stereoscopic Video Track
   28. Annex A: References
     28.1.  Normative References
     28.2.  Informative References
   Appendix A.  Historic Deprecated Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
     28.1.
     A.1.  SilentTracks Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 155
     28.2.
     A.2.  SilentTrackNumber Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.3.
     A.3.  BlockVirtual Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.4.
     A.4.  ReferenceVirtual Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.5.
     A.5.  Slices Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.6.
     A.6.  TimeSlice Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.7.
     A.7.  LaceNumber Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 156
     28.8.
     A.8.  FrameNumber Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.9.
     A.9.  BlockAdditionID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.10.
     A.10. Delay Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.11.
     A.11. SliceDuration Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.12.
     A.12. ReferenceFrame Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.13.
     A.13. ReferenceOffset Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.14.
     A.14. ReferenceTimestamp Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
     28.15.
     A.15. EncryptedBlock Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.16.
     A.16. MinCache Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.17.
     A.17. MaxCache Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.18.
     A.18. TrackOffset Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.19.
     A.19. CodecSettings Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.20.
     A.20. CodecInfoURL Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 158
     28.21.
     A.21. CodecDownloadURL Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.22.
     A.22. CodecDecodeAll Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.23.
     A.23. TrackOverlay Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.24.
     A.24. AspectRatioType Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.25.
     A.25. GammaValue Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.26.
     A.26. FrameRate Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
     28.27.
     A.27. ChannelPositions Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.28.
     A.28. TrickTrackUID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.29.
     A.29. TrickTrackSegmentUID Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.30.
     A.30. TrickTrackFlag Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.31.
     A.31. TrickMasterTrackUID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.32.
     A.32. TrickMasterTrackSegmentUID Element . . . . . . . . . . . 160
     28.33.
     A.33. ContentSignature Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.34.
     A.34. ContentSigKeyID Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.35.
     A.35. ContentSigAlgo Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.36.
     A.36. ContentSigHashAlgo Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.37.
     A.37. CueRefCluster Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.38.
     A.38. CueRefNumber Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.39.
     A.39. CueRefCodecState Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
     28.40.
     A.40. FileReferral Element . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
     28.41.
     A.41. FileUsedStartTime Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
     28.42.
     A.42. FileUsedEndTime Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
     28.43.
     A.43. TagDefaultBogus Element  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
   29. Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162
   30. Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 164
   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166

1.  Introduction

   Matroska is an audiovisual data container format.  It was derived
   from a project called [MCF], [MCF] but diverges from it significantly
   because it is based on EBML (Extensible Binary Meta Language)
   [RFC8794], a binary derivative of XML.  EBML provides significant
   advantages in terms of future format extensibility, without breaking
   file support in parsers reading the previous versions.

   First,

   To avoid any misunderstandings, it is essential to clarify exactly "What
   what an Audio/Video audio/video container is", to avoid any misunderstandings: is:

   *  It is NOT a video or audio compression format (codec) (codec).

   *  It is an envelope in which there can be many audio, video, and
      subtitles streams, allowing the user to store a complete movie or
      CD in a single file.

   Matroska is designed with the future in mind.  It incorporates
   features such as:

   *  Fast seeking in the file

   *  Chapter entries

   *  Full metadata (tags) support

   *  Selectable subtitle/audio/video streams

   *  Modularly expandable

   *  Error resilience (can recover playback even when the stream is
      damaged)

   *  Streamable over the internet Internet and local networks (HTTP [RFC9110],
      FTP [RFC0959], SMB [SMB-CIFS], etc.)

   *  Menus (like menus that DVDs have [DVD-Video])

2.  Status of this document This Document

   This document covers Matroska versions 1, 2, 3 3, and 4.  Matroska v4
   version 4 is the current version.  Matroska versions 1 to 3 are no
   longer maintained.  No new elements are expected in files with
   version numbers 1, 2, or 3.

3.  Notation and Conventions

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
   BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
   capitals, as shown here.

   This document defines specific the following terms in order to define the
   format and application of Matroska.  Specific terms are defined below: Matroska:

   Matroska:  A multimedia container format based on EBML (Extensible
      Binary Meta Language).

   Matroska Reader:  A data parser that interprets the semantics of a
      Matroska document and creates a way for programs to use Matroska.

   Matroska Player:  A Matroska Reader with a the primary purpose of
      playing audiovisual files, including Matroska documents.

   Matroska Writer:  A data writer that creates Matroska documents.

4.  Matroska Overview

4.1.  Principles

   Matroska is a Document Type of EBML (Extensible Binary Meta
   Language). EBML.  This specification is dependent
   on the EBML Specification specification [RFC8794].  For an understanding of
   Matroska's EBML Schema, see in particular the sections of the EBML Specification covering
   specification that cover EBML Element Types (Section 7), EBML Schema
   (Section 11.1), and EBML Structure (Section 3).

4.2.  Updates to RFC 8794

   Because of an oversight, [RFC8794] reserved EBML ID 0x80, which is
   used by deployed Matroska implementations.  For this reason, this
   specification updates [RFC8794] to make 0x80 a legal EBML ID.
   Specifically,
   Additionally, this specification makes the following are changed in [RFC8794]: updates:

   *  From Errata 7189

   In  Section 17.1, 17.1 of [RFC8794] (per Erratum ID #7189 [Err7189])

      OLD:

      |  One-octet Element IDs MUST be between 0x81 and 0xFE.  These
      |  items are valuable because they are short, and they need to be
      |  used for commonly repeated elements.  Element IDs are to be
      |  allocated within this range according to the "RFC Required"
      |  policy [RFC8126].
      |
      |  The following one-octet Element IDs are RESERVED: 0xFF and
      |  0x80.

      NEW:

      |  One-octet Element IDs MUST be between 0x80 and 0xFE.  These
      |  items are valuable because they are short, and they need to be
      |  used for commonly repeated elements.  Element IDs are to be
      |  allocated within this range according to the "RFC Required"
      |  policy [RFC8126].
      |
      |  The following one-octet Element ID is RESERVED: 0xFF.

   *  From Errata 7191

   In  Section 5, 5 of [RFC8794] (per Erratum ID #7191 [Err7191])

      OLD:

      +=========================+================+=================+
      | Element ID Octet Length | Range of Valid | Number of Valid |
      |                         |  Element IDs   |     Element IDs |
      +=========================+================+=================+
      |            1            |  0x81 - 0xFE   |             126 |
      +-------------------------+----------------+-----------------+

      NEW:

      +=========================+================+=================+
      | Element ID Octet Length | Range of Valid | Number of Valid |
      |                         |  Element IDs   |     Element IDs |
      +=========================+================+=================+
      |            1            |  0x80 - 0xFE   |             127 |
      +-------------------------+----------------+-----------------+

4.3.  Added EBML Constraints

   As an EBML Document Type, Matroska adds the following constraints to
   the EBML specification. specification [RFC8794]:

   *  The docType of the EBML Header MUST be "matroska".

   *  The EBMLMaxIDLength of the EBML Header MUST be 4.

   *  The EBMLMaxSizeLength of the EBML Header MUST be between 1 and 8 8,
      inclusive.

4.4.  Design Rules

   The Root Element and all Top-Levels Top-Level Elements MUST use 4 octets for
   their EBML Element ID -- i.e. i.e., Segment and direct children of
   Segment.

   Legacy EBML/Matroska parsers did not handle Empty Elements properly, properly;
   elements were present in the file but with had a length of zero. 0.  They always
   assumed the value was 0 for integers/dates or 0x0p+0, the textual
   expression of floats using the [ISO9899] format, format in [ISO9899], no matter the
   default value of the element which that should have been used instead.
   Therefore, Matroska writers Writers MUST NOT use EBML Empty Elements, Elements if the
   element has a default value that is not 0 for integers/dates and
   0x0p+0 for floats.

   When adding new elements to Matroska, these rules apply:

   *  A non-mandatory integer/date Element MUST NOT have a default value
      other than 0.

   *  A non-mandatory float Element MUST NOT have a default value other
      than 0x0p+0.

   *  A non-mandatory string Element MUST NOT have a default value, as
      empty string strings cannot be defined in the XML Schema.

4.5.  Data Layout

   A Matroska file MUST be composed of at least one EBML Document using
   the Matroska Document Type.  Each EBML Document MUST start with an
   EBML Header and MUST be followed by the EBML Root Element, defined as
   Segment in Matroska.  Matroska defines several Top-Level Elements
   which
   that may occur within the Segment.

   As an example, a simple Matroska file consisting of a single EBML
   Document could be represented like this:

   *  EBML Header
   *  Segment

   A more complex Matroska file consisting of an EBML Stream (consisting
   of two EBML Documents) could be represented like this:

   *  EBML Header
   *  Segment
   *  EBML Header
   *  Segment

   The following diagram represents a simple Matroska file, comprised of
   an EBML Document with an EBML Header, a Segment Element (the Root
   Element), and all eight Matroska Top-Level Elements.  In the
   following diagrams of
   in this section, horizontal spacing expresses a parent-child
   relationship between Matroska Elements (e.g., the Info Element is
   contained within the Segment Element) Element), whereas vertical alignment
   represents the storage order within the file.

   +-------------+
   | EBML Header |
   +---------------------------+
   | Segment     | SeekHead    |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Info        |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Tracks      |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Chapters    |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Cluster     |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Cues        |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Attachments |
   |             |-------------|
   |             | Tags        |
   +---------------------------+

                 Figure 1: Basic layout Layout of a Matroska file. File

   The Matroska EBML Schema defines eight Top-Level Elements:

   *  SeekHead (Section 6.3), 6.3)

   *  Info (Section 6.5), 6.5)

   *  Tracks (Section 18), 18)

   *  Chapters (Section 20), 20)

   *  Cluster (Section 10), 10)

   *  Cues (Section 22), 22)

   *  Attachments (Section 21), 21)

   *  and  Tags (Section 6.8). 6.8)

   The SeekHead Element (also known as MetaSeek) contains an index of
   Top-Level Elements locations within the Segment.  Use of the SeekHead
   Element is RECOMMENDED.  Without a SeekHead Element, a Matroska
   parser would have to search the entire file to find all of the other
   Top-Level Elements.  This is due to Matroska's flexible ordering
   requirements; for instance, it is acceptable for the Chapters Element
   to be stored after the Cluster Elements. Element.

   +--------------------------------+
   | SeekHead | Seek | SeekID       |
   |          |      |--------------|
   |          |      | SeekPosition |
   +--------------------------------+

               Figure 2: Representation of a SeekHead Element. Element

   The Info Element contains vital information for identifying the whole
   Segment.  This includes the title for the Segment, a randomly
   generated unique identifier, identifier (UID), and the unique identifier(s) UID(s) of any linked
   Segment Elements.

   +-------------------------+
   | Info | SegmentUUID      |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | SegmentFilename  |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | PrevUUID         |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | PrevFilename     |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | NextUUID         |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | NextFilename     |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | SegmentFamily    |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | ChapterTranslate |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | TimestampScale   |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | Duration         |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | DateUTC          |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | Title            |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | MuxingApp        |
   |      |------------------|
   |      | WritingApp       |
   |-------------------------|

     Figure 3: Representation of an Info Element and its Its Child Elements. Elements

   The Tracks Element defines the technical details for each track and
   can store the name, number, unique identifier, UID, language, and type (audio, video,
   subtitles, etc.) of each track.  For example, the Tracks Element MAY
   store information about the resolution of a video track or sample
   rate of an audio track.

   The Tracks Element MUST identify all the data needed by the codec to
   decode the data of the specified track.  However, the data required
   is contingent on the codec used for the track.  For example, a Track
   Element for uncompressed audio only requires the audio bit rate to be
   present.  A codec such as AC-3 would require that the CodecID Element
   be present for all tracks, as it is the primary way to identify which
   codec to use to decode the track.

   +------------------------------------+
   | Tracks | TrackEntry | TrackNumber  |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | TrackUID     |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | TrackType    |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | Name         |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | Language     |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | CodecID      |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | CodecPrivate |
   |        |            |--------------|
   |        |            | CodecName    |
   |        |            |----------------------------------+
   |        |            | Video        | FlagInterlaced    |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | FieldOrder        |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | StereoMode        |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | AlphaMode         |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | PixelWidth        |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | PixelHeight       |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | DisplayWidth      |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | DisplayHeight     |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | AspectRatioType   |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | Color             |
   |        |            |----------------------------------|
   |        |            | Audio        | SamplingFrequency |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | Channels          |
   |        |            |              |-------------------|
   |        |            |              | BitDepth          |
   |--------------------------------------------------------|

   Figure 4: Representation of the Tracks Element and a selection Selection of its Its
                            Descendant Elements. Elements

   The Chapters Element lists all of the chapters.  Chapters are a way
   to set predefined points to jump to in video or audio.

   +-----------------------------------------+
   | Chapters | Edition | EditionUID         |
   |          | Entry   |--------------------|
   |          |         | EditionFlagDefault |
   |          |         |--------------------|
   |          |         | EditionFlagOrdered |
   |          |         |---------------------------------+
   |          |         | ChapterAtom | ChapterUID        |
   |          |         |             |-------------------|
   |          |         |             | ChapterStringUID  |
   |          |         |             |-------------------|
   |          |         |             | ChapterTimeStart  |
   |          |         |             |-------------------|
   |          |         |             | ChapterTimeEnd    |
   |          |         |             |-------------------|
   |          |         |             | ChapterFlagHidden |
   |          |         |             |-------------------------------+
   |          |         |             | ChapterDisplay | ChapString   |
   |          |         |             |                |--------------|
   |          |         |             |                | ChapLanguage |
   +------------------------------------------------------------------+

      Figure 5: Representation of the Chapters Element and a selection Selection
                         of its Its Descendant Elements. Elements

   Cluster Elements contain the content for each track, e.g., video
   frames.  A Matroska file SHOULD contain at least one Cluster Element.
   In the rare case it doesn't, there should be a form of Segment
   linking with other Segments, possibly using Chapters, Chapters; see Section 17.

   The Cluster Element helps to break up SimpleBlock or BlockGroup
   Elements and helps with seeking and error protection.  Every Cluster
   Element MUST contain a Timestamp Element.  This SHOULD be the
   Timestamp Element used to play the first Block in the Cluster
   Element, unless a different value is needed to accommodate for more
   Blocks,
   Blocks; see Section 11.2.

   Cluster Elements contain one or more block element, such as
   BlockGroup or SimpleBlock elements.  In some situations, a Cluster
   Element MAY contain no block element, for example example, in a live
   recording when no data has been collected.

   A BlockGroup Element MAY contain a Block of data and any information
   relating directly to that Block.

   +--------------------------+
   | Cluster | Timestamp      |
   |         |----------------|
   |         | Position       |
   |         |----------------|
   |         | PrevSize       |
   |         |----------------|
   |         | SimpleBlock    |
   |         |----------------|
   |         | BlockGroup     |
   +--------------------------+

      Figure 6: Representation of a Cluster Element and its immediate Its Immediate
                               Child Elements. Elements

   +----------------------------------+
   | Block | Portion of | Data Type   |
   |       | a Block    |  - Bit Flag |
   |       |--------------------------+
   |       | Header     | TrackNumber |
   |       |            |-------------|
   |       |            | Timestamp   |
   |       |            |-------------|
   |       |            | Flags       |
   |       |            |  - Gap      |
   |       |            |  - Lacing   |
   |       |            |  - Reserved |
   |       |--------------------------|
   |       | Optional   | FrameSize   |
   |       |--------------------------|
   |       | Data       | Frame       |
   +----------------------------------+

          Figure 7: Representation of the Block Element structure. Structure

   Each Cluster MUST contain exactly one Timestamp Element.  The
   Timestamp Element value MUST be stored once per Cluster.  The
   Timestamp Element in the Cluster is relative to the entire Segment.
   The Timestamp Element SHOULD be the first Element in the Cluster it
   belongs to, to or the second Element if that Cluster contains a CRC-32
   element (Section 6.2)

   Additionally, the Block contains an offset that, when added to the
   Cluster's Timestamp Element value, yields the Block's effective
   timestamp.  Therefore, the timestamp in the Block itself is relative
   to the Timestamp Element in the Cluster.  For example, if the
   Timestamp Element in the Cluster is set to 10 seconds and a Block in
   that Cluster is supposed to be played 12 seconds into the clip, the
   timestamp in the Block would be set to 2 seconds.

   The ReferenceBlock in the BlockGroup is used instead of the basic
   "P-frame"/"B-frame" description.  Instead of simply saying that this
   Block depends on the Block directly before, before or directly afterwards, after, the
   Timestamp of the necessary Block is used.  Because there can be as
   many ReferenceBlock Elements as necessary for a Block, it allows for
   some extremely complex referencing.

   The Cues Element is used to seek when playing back a file by
   providing a temporal index for some of the Tracks.  It is similar to
   the SeekHead Element, Element but is used for seeking to a specific time when
   playing back the file.  It is possible to seek without this element,
   but it is much more difficult because a Matroska Reader would have to
   'hunt
   "hunt and peck' peck" through the file looking to look for the correct timestamp.

   The Cues Element SHOULD contain at least one CuePoint Element.  Each
   CuePoint Element stores the position of the Cluster that contains the
   BlockGroup or SimpleBlock Element.  The timestamp is stored in the
   CueTime Element Element, and the location is stored in the CueTrackPositions
   Element.

   The Cues Element is flexible.  For instance, the Cues Element can be
   used to index every single timestamp of every Block or they can be
   indexed selectively.

   +-------------------------------------+
   | Cues | CuePoint | CueTime           |
   |      |          |-------------------|
   |      |          | CueTrackPositions |
   |      |------------------------------|
   |      | CuePoint | CueTime           |
   |      |          |-------------------|
   |      |          | CueTrackPositions |
   +-------------------------------------+

      Figure 8: Representation of a Cues Element and two levels Two Levels of its Its
                            Descendant Elements. Elements

   The Attachments Element is for attaching files to a Matroska file file,
   such as pictures, fonts, webpages, web pages, etc.

   +------------------------------------------------+
   | Attachments | AttachedFile | FileDescription   |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileName          |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileMediaType     |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileData          |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileUID           |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileName          |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileReferral      |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileUsedStartTime |
   |             |              |-------------------|
   |             |              | FileUsedEndTime   |
   +------------------------------------------------+

             Figure 9: Representation of an Attachments Element. Element

   The Tags Element contains metadata that describes the Segment and
   potentially its Tracks, Chapters, and Attachments.  Each Track or
   Chapter that those tags applies to has its UID listed in the Tags.
   The Tags contain all extra information about the file: scriptwriter,
   singer, scriptwriters,
   singers, actors, directors, titles, edition, price, dates, genre,
   comments, etc.  Tags can contain their values in multiple languages.
   For example, a movie's "title" Tag might contain both the original
   English title as well as the title it was released as in Germany.

   +-------------------------------------------+
   | Tags | Tag | Targets   | TargetTypeValue  |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TargetType       |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagTrackUID      |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagEditionUID    |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagChapterUID    |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagAttachmentUID |
   |      |     |------------------------------|
   |      |     | SimpleTag | TagName          |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagLanguage      |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagDefault       |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagString        |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | TagBinary        |
   |      |     |           |------------------|
   |      |     |           | SimpleTag        |
   +-------------------------------------------+

      Figure 10: Representation of a Tags Element and three levels Three Levels of
                           its
                           Its Children Elements. Elements

5.  Matroska Schema

   This specification includes an EBML Schema, which Schema that defines the Elements
   and structure of Matroska using the EBML Schema elements and
   attributes defined in Section 11.1 of [RFC8794].  The EBML Schema
   defines every valid Matroska element in a manner defined by the EBML
   specification.
   specification [RFC8794].

   Attributes using their default value like (like minOccurs, minver, etc. etc.)
   or attributes with undefined values like (like length, maxver, etc. etc.) are
   omitted.

   Here the definition of

   The definitions for each Matroska Element is provided. are provided below.

5.1.  Segment Element

   id / type:  0x18538067 / master
   unknownsizeallowed:  True
   path:  \Segment
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The Root Element that contains all other Top-Level
      Elements; see Section 4.5.

5.1.1.  SeekHead Element

   id / type:  0x114D9B74 / master
   path:  \Segment\SeekHead
   maxOccurs:  2
   definition:  Contains seeking information of Top-Level Elements; see
      Section 4.5.

5.1.1.1.  Seek Element

   id / type:  0x4DBB / master
   path:  \Segment\SeekHead\Seek
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contains a single seek entry to an EBML Element.

5.1.1.1.1.  SeekID Element

   id / type:  0x53AB / binary
   length:  4
   path:  \Segment\SeekHead\Seek\SeekID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The binary EBML ID of a Top-Level Element.

5.1.1.1.2.  SeekPosition Element

   id / type:  0x53AC / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\SeekHead\Seek\SeekPosition
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The Segment Position (Section 16) of a Top-Level
      Element.

5.1.2.  Info Element

   id / type:  0x1549A966 / master
   path:  \Segment\Info
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   recurring:  True
   definition:  Contains general information about the Segment.

5.1.2.1.  SegmentUUID Element

   id / type:  0x73A4 / binary
   length:  16
   path:  \Segment\Info\SegmentUUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A randomly generated unique ID to identify UID that identifies the Segment
      amongst many others (128 bits).  It is equivalent to a UUID Universally
      Unique Identifier (UUID) v4 [RFC4122] with all bits randomly (or pseudo-randomly)
      pseudorandomly) chosen.  An actual UUID v4 value, where some bits
      are not random, MAY also be used.
   usage notes:  If the Segment is a part of a Linked Segment, then this
      Element is REQUIRED.  The value of the unique ID UID MUST contain at least
      one bit set to 1.

5.1.2.2.  SegmentFilename Element

   id / type:  0x7384 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\SegmentFilename
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A filename corresponding to this Segment.

5.1.2.3.  PrevUUID Element

   id / type:  0x3CB923 / binary
   length:  16
   path:  \Segment\Info\PrevUUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  An ID to identify that identifies the previous Segment of a Linked
      Segment.
   usage notes:  If the Segment is a part of a Linked Segment that uses
      Hard Linking (Section 17.1), then either the PrevUUID or the
      NextUUID Element is REQUIRED.  If a Segment contains a PrevUUID
      but not a NextUUID, then it MAY be considered as the last Segment
      of the Linked Segment.  The PrevUUID MUST NOT be equal to the
      SegmentUUID.

5.1.2.4.  PrevFilename Element

   id / type:  0x3C83AB / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\PrevFilename
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A filename corresponding to the file of the previous
      Linked Segment.
   usage notes:  Provision of the previous filename is for display
      convenience, but PrevUUID SHOULD be considered authoritative for
      identifying the previous Segment in a Linked Segment.

5.1.2.5.  NextUUID Element

   id / type:  0x3EB923 / binary
   length:  16
   path:  \Segment\Info\NextUUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  An ID to identify that identifies the next Segment of a Linked
      Segment.
   usage notes:  If the Segment is a part of a Linked Segment that uses
      Hard Linking (Section 17.1), then either the PrevUUID or the
      NextUUID Element is REQUIRED.  If a Segment contains a NextUUID
      but not a PrevUUID, then it MAY be considered as the first Segment
      of the Linked Segment.  The NextUUID MUST NOT be equal to the
      SegmentUUID.

5.1.2.6.  NextFilename Element

   id / type:  0x3E83BB / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\NextFilename
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A filename corresponding to the file of the next Linked
      Segment.
   usage notes:  Provision of the next filename is for display
      convenience, but NextUUID SHOULD be considered authoritative for
      identifying the Next Segment.

5.1.2.7.  SegmentFamily Element

   id / type:  0x4444 / binary
   length:  16
   path:  \Segment\Info\SegmentFamily
   definition:  A unique ID UID that all Segments of a Linked Segment MUST share
      (128 bits).  It is equivalent to a UUID v4 [RFC4122] with all bits
      randomly (or pseudo-randomly) pseudorandomly) chosen.  An actual UUID v4 value,
      where some bits are not random, MAY also be used.
   usage notes:  If the Segment Info contains a ChapterTranslate
      element, this Element is REQUIRED.

5.1.2.8.  ChapterTranslate Element

   id / type:  0x6924 / master
   path:  \Segment\Info\ChapterTranslate
   definition:  The mapping between this Segment and a segment value in
      the given Chapter Codec.
   rationale:  Chapter Codec may need to address different segments, but
      they may not know of the way to identify such segment segments when stored
      in Matroska.  This element and its child elements add a way to map
      the internal segments known to the Chapter Codec to the Segment
      IDs in Matroska.  This allows remuxing a file with the Chapter
      Codec without changing the content of the codec data, just the
      Segment mapping.

5.1.2.8.1.  ChapterTranslateID Element

   id / type:  0x69A5 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Info\ChapterTranslate\ChapterTranslateID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The binary value used to represent this Segment in the
      chapter codec data.  The format depends on the ChapProcessCodecID
      used; see Section 5.1.7.1.4.15.

5.1.2.8.2.  ChapterTranslateCodec Element

   id / type:  0x69BF / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Info\ChapterTranslate\ChapterTranslateCodec
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  This ChapterTranslate applies to this chapter codec of
      the given chapter edition(s); see Section 5.1.7.1.4.15.
   defined values:  See Table 1.

         +=======+=================+============================+
         | value | label           | definition                 |
         +=======+=================+============================+
         | 0     | Matroska Script | Chapter commands using the |
         |       |                 | Matroska Script codec.     |
         +-------+-----------------+----------------------------+
         | 1     | DVD-menu        | Chapter commands using the |
         |       |                 | DVD-like codec.            |
         +-------+-----------------+----------------------------+

                  Table 1: ChapterTranslateCodec values Values

5.1.2.8.3.  ChapterTranslateEditionUID Element

   id / type:  0x69FC / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Info\ChapterTranslate\ChapterTranslateEditionUID
   definition:  Specify a chapter edition UID on to which this
      ChapterTranslate applies.
   usage notes:  When no ChapterTranslateEditionUID is specified in the
      ChapterTranslate, the ChapterTranslate applies to all chapter
      editions found in the Segment using the given
      ChapterTranslateCodec.

5.1.2.9.  TimestampScale Element

   id / type / default:  0x2AD7B1 / uinteger / 1000000
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Info\TimestampScale
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Base unit for Segment Ticks and Track Ticks, in
      nanoseconds.  A TimestampScale value of 1000000 means scaled
      timestamps in the Segment are expressed in milliseconds; see
      Section 11 on how to interpret timestamps.

5.1.2.10.  Duration Element

   id / type:  0x4489 / float
   range:  > 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Info\Duration
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Duration of the Segment, expressed in Segment Ticks Ticks,
      which is are based on TimestampScale; see Section 11.1.

5.1.2.11.  DateUTC Element

   id / type:  0x4461 / date
   path:  \Segment\Info\DateUTC
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  The date and time that the Segment was created by the
      muxing application or library.

5.1.2.12.  Title Element

   id / type:  0x7BA9 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\Title
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  General name of the Segment.

5.1.2.13.  MuxingApp Element

   id / type:  0x4D80 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\MuxingApp
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Muxing application or library (example: "libmatroska-
      0.4.3").
   usage notes:  Include the full name of the application or library
      followed by the version number.

5.1.2.14.  WritingApp Element

   id / type:  0x5741 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Info\WritingApp
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Writing application (example: "mkvmerge-0.3.3").
   usage notes:  Include the full name of the application followed by
      the version number.

5.1.3.  Cluster Element

   id / type:  0x1F43B675 / master
   unknownsizeallowed:  True
   path:  \Segment\Cluster
   definition:  The Top-Level Element containing the (monolithic) Block
      structure.

5.1.3.1.  Timestamp Element

   id / type:  0xE7 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\Timestamp
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Absolute timestamp of the cluster, expressed in Segment
      Ticks
      Ticks, which is are based on TimestampScale; see Section 11.1.
   usage notes:  This element SHOULD be the first child element of the
      Cluster it belongs to, to or the second if that Cluster contains a
      CRC-32 element (Section 6.2).

5.1.3.2.  Position Element

   id / type:  0xA7 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\Position
   maxOccurs:  1
   maxver:  4
   definition:  The Segment Position of the Cluster in the Segment (0 in
      live streams).  It might help to resynchronise resynchronize the offset on
      damaged streams.

5.1.3.3.  PrevSize Element

   id / type:  0xAB / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\PrevSize
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Size of the previous Cluster, in octets.  Can be useful
      for backward playing.

5.1.3.4.  SimpleBlock Element

   id / type:  0xA3 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\SimpleBlock
   minver:  2
   definition:  Similar to Block, see Block (see Section 10.1, 10.1) but without all the
      extra information, mostly information.  Mostly used to reduced reduce overhead when no extra
      feature is needed; see Section 10.2 on SimpleBlock Structure.

5.1.3.5.  BlockGroup Element

   id / type:  0xA0 / master
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup
   definition:  Basic container of information containing a single Block
      and information specific to that Block.

5.1.3.5.1.  Block Element

   id / type:  0xA1 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Block
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Block containing the actual data to be rendered and a
      timestamp relative to the Cluster Timestamp; see Section 10.1 on
      Block Structure.

5.1.3.5.2.  BlockAdditions Element

   id / type:  0x75A1 / master
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockAdditions
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contain  Contains additional binary data to complete the main
      one; see Codec BlockAdditions section Section 4.1.5 of [MatroskaCodec] for more information.
      An EBML parser that has no knowledge of the Block structure could
      still see and use/skip these data.

5.1.3.5.2.1.  BlockMore Element

   id / type:  0xA6 / master
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockAdditions\BlockMore
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contain  Contains the BlockAdditional and some parameters.

5.1.3.5.2.2.  BlockAdditional Element

   id / type:  0xA5 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockAdditions\BlockMore\BlockAddi
      tional
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Interpreted by the codec as it wishes (using the
      BlockAddID).

5.1.3.5.2.3.  BlockAddID Element

   id / type / default:  0xEE / uinteger / 1
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockAdditions\BlockMore\BlockAddI
      D
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  An ID to identify that identifies how to interpret the
      BlockAdditional data; see Codec BlockAdditions section Section 4.1.5 of [MatroskaCodec] for
      more information.  A value of 1 indicates that the meaning of the
      BlockAdditional data is defined by the codec.  Any other value
      indicates the meaning of the BlockAdditional data is found in the
      BlockAddIDType found in the TrackEntry.
   usage notes:  Each BlockAddID value MUST be unique between all
      BlockMore elements found in a BlockAdditions.
   usage notes:  To keep MaxBlockAdditionID as low as possible, small
      values SHOULD be used.

5.1.3.5.3.  BlockDuration Element

   id / type:  0x9B / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockDuration
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  see implementation notes / 1
   definition:  The duration of the Block, expressed in Track Ticks; see
      Section 11.1.  The BlockDuration Element can be useful at the end
      of a Track to define the duration of the last frame (as there is
      no subsequent Block available), available) or when there is a break in a track
      like for subtitle tracks.
   notes:  See Table 2.

     +===========+===================================================+
     | attribute | note                                              |
     +===========+===================================================+
     | minOccurs | BlockDuration MUST be set (minOccurs=1) if the    |
     |           | associated TrackEntry stores a DefaultDuration    |
     |           | value.                                            |
     +-----------+---------------------------------------------------+
     | default   | When not written and with no DefaultDuration, the |
     |           | value is assumed to be the difference between the |
     |           | timestamp of this Block and the timestamp of the  |
     |           | next Block in "display" order (not coding order). |
     +-----------+---------------------------------------------------+

                Table 2: BlockDuration implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.3.5.4.  ReferencePriority Element

   id / type / default:  0xFA / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferencePriority
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  This frame is referenced and has the specified cache
      priority.  In cache the cache, only a frame of the same or higher
      priority can replace this frame.  A value of 0 means the frame is
      not referenced.

5.1.3.5.5.  ReferenceBlock Element

   id / type:  0xFB / integer
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceBlock
   definition:  A timestamp value, relative to the timestamp of the
      Block in this BlockGroup, expressed in Track Ticks; see
      Section 11.1.  This is used to reference other frames necessary to
      decode this frame.  The relative value SHOULD correspond to a
      valid Block that this Block depends on.  Historically  Historically, Matroska Writer
      Writers didn't write the actual Block(s) that this Block depends
      on, but they did write _some_
      Block Block(s) in the past.

   The value "0" MAY also be used to signify that this Block cannot be
   decoded on its own, but without knownledge knowledge of which Block is
   necessary.  In this case, other ReferenceBlock Elements MUST NOT be
   found in the same BlockGroup.

   If the BlockGroup doesn't have any a ReferenceBlock element, then the
   Block it contains can be decoded without using any other Block data.

5.1.3.5.6.  CodecState Element

   id / type:  0xA4 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\CodecState
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  2
   definition:  The new codec state to use.  Data interpretation is
      private to the codec.  This information SHOULD always be
      referenced by a seek entry.

5.1.3.5.7.  DiscardPadding Element

   id / type:  0x75A2 / integer
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\DiscardPadding
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Duration of the silent data added to the Block,
      expressed in Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see
      Section 11.1 (padding at the end of the Block for positive value, values
      and at the beginning of the Block for negative value). values).  The
      duration of DiscardPadding is not calculated in the duration of
      the TrackEntry and SHOULD be discarded during playback.

5.1.4.  Tracks Element

   id / type:  0x1654AE6B / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks
   maxOccurs:  1
   recurring:  True
   definition:  A Top-Level Element of information with many tracks
      described.

5.1.4.1.  TrackEntry Element

   id / type:  0xAE / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Describes a track with all Elements.

5.1.4.1.1.  TrackNumber Element

   id / type:  0xD7 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackNumber
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The track number as used in the Block Header.

5.1.4.1.2.  TrackUID Element

   id / type:  0x73C5 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackUID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A unique ID to identify UID that identifies the Track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.3.  TrackType Element

   id / type:  0x83 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The TrackType defines the type of each frame found in
      the Track.  The value SHOULD be stored on 1 octet.
   defined values:  See Table 3.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

      +=======+==========+==========================================+
      | value | label    | contents of each frame contains                   |
      +=======+==========+==========================================+
      | 1     | video    | An image.                                |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 2     | audio    | Audio samples.                           |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 3     | complex  | A mix of different other TrackType.  The |
      |       |          | codec needs to define how the Matroska   |
      |       |          | Player should interpret such data.       |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 16    | logo     | An image to be rendered over the video   |
      |       |          | track(s).                                |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 17    | subtitle | Subtitle or closed caption data to be    |
      |       |          | rendered over the video track(s).        |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 18    | buttons  | Interactive button(s) to be rendered     |
      |       |          | over the video track(s).                 |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 32    | control  | Metadata used to control the player of   |
      |       |          | the Matroska Player.                     |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+
      | 33    | metadata | Timed metadata that can be passed on to  |
      |       |          | the Matroska Player.                     |
      +-------+----------+------------------------------------------+

                         Table 3: TrackType values Values

5.1.4.1.4.  FlagEnabled Element

   id / type / default:  0xB9 / uinteger / 1
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagEnabled
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  2
   definition:  Set to 1 if the track is usable.  It is possible to turn
      a track that is not usable track into a usable track using chapter
      codecs or control tracks.

5.1.4.1.5.  FlagDefault Element

   id / type / default:  0x88 / uinteger / 1
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagDefault
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Set if that the track (audio, video video, or subs) is eligible for
      automatic selection by the player; see Section 19 for more
      details.

5.1.4.1.6.  FlagForced Element

   id / type / default:  0x55AA / uinteger / 0
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagForced
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Applies only to subtitles.  Set if that the track is eligible
      for automatic selection by the player if it matches the user's
      language preference, even if the user's preferences would
      normally not
      normally enable subtitles with the selected audio track; this can
      be used for tracks containing only translations of foreign-
      language audio in
      foreign languages or onscreen on-screen text.  See Section 19 for more
      details.

5.1.4.1.7.  FlagHearingImpaired Element

   id / type:  0x55AB / uinteger
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagHearingImpaired
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Set to 1 if and only if that the track is suitable for users
      with hearing impairments.

5.1.4.1.8.  FlagVisualImpaired Element

   id / type:  0x55AC / uinteger
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagVisualImpaired
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Set to 1 if and only if that the track is suitable for users
      with visual impairments.

5.1.4.1.9.  FlagTextDescriptions Element

   id / type:  0x55AD / uinteger
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagTextDescriptions
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Set to 1 if and only if that the track contains textual
      descriptions of video content.

5.1.4.1.10.  FlagOriginal Element

   id / type:  0x55AE / uinteger
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagOriginal
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Set to 1 if and only if that the track is in the content's
      original language.

5.1.4.1.11.  FlagCommentary Element

   id / type:  0x55AF / uinteger
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagCommentary
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Set to 1 if and only if that the track contains commentary.

5.1.4.1.12.  FlagLacing Element

   id / type / default:  0x9C / uinteger / 1
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\FlagLacing
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Set to 1 if the track MAY contain blocks using that use
      lacing.  When set to 0 0, all blocks MUST have their lacing flags
      set to No
      lacing; "no lacing"; see Section 10.3 on Block Lacing.

5.1.4.1.13.  DefaultDuration Element

   id / type:  0x23E383 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\DefaultDuration
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Number of nanoseconds per frame, expressed in Matroska
      Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1 (frame ("frame" in the
      Matroska sense -- one Element put into a (Simple)Block).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.14.  DefaultDecodedFieldDuration Element

   id / type:  0x234E7A / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\DefaultDecodedFieldDuration
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The period between two successive fields at the output
      of the decoding process, expressed in Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in
      nanoseconds; see Section 11.1. see  See Section 9 for more information
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.15.  TrackTimestampScale Element

   id / type / default:  0x23314F / float / 0x1p+0
   range:  > 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackTimestampScale
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   maxver:  3
   definition:  The scale to apply on this track to work at normal speed
      in relation with other tracks (mostly used to adjust video speed
      when the audio length differs).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.16.  MaxBlockAdditionID Element

   id / type / default:  0x55EE / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\MaxBlockAdditionID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The maximum value of BlockAddID (Section 5.1.3.5.2.3).
      A value of 0 means there is no BlockAdditions (Section 5.1.3.5.2)
      for this track.

5.1.4.1.17.  BlockAdditionMapping Element

   id / type:  0x41E4 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\BlockAdditionMapping
   minver:  4
   definition:  Contains elements that extend the track format, format by adding
      content either to each frame, with BlockAddID
      (Section 5.1.3.5.2.3), or to the track as a whole with
      BlockAddIDExtraData.

5.1.4.1.17.1.  BlockAddIDValue Element

   id / type:  0x41F0 / uinteger
   range:  >=2
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\BlockAdditionMapping\BlockAddIDValu
      e
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  If the track format extension needs content beside
      frames, the value refers to the BlockAddID (Section 5.1.3.5.2.3), 5.1.3.5.2.3)
      value being described.
   usage notes:  To keep MaxBlockAdditionID as low as possible, small
      values SHOULD be used.

5.1.4.1.17.2.  BlockAddIDName Element

   id / type:  0x41A4 / string
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\BlockAdditionMapping\BlockAddIDName
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  A human-friendly name describing the type of
      BlockAdditional data, as defined by the associated Block
      Additional Mapping.

5.1.4.1.17.3.  BlockAddIDType Element

   id / type / default:  0x41E7 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\BlockAdditionMapping\BlockAddIDType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Stores the registered identifier of the Block Additional
      Mapping to define how the BlockAdditional data should be handled.
   usage notes:  If BlockAddIDType is 0, the BlockAddIDValue and
      corresponding BlockAddID values MUST be 1.

5.1.4.1.17.4.  BlockAddIDExtraData Element

   id / type:  0x41ED / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\BlockAdditionMapping\BlockAddIDExtr
      aData
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Extra binary data that the BlockAddIDType can use to
      interpret the BlockAdditional data.  The interpretation of the
      binary data depends on the BlockAddIDType value and the
      corresponding Block Additional Mapping.

5.1.4.1.18.  Name Element

   id / type:  0x536E / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Name
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A human-readable track name.

5.1.4.1.19.  Language Element

   id / type / default:  0x22B59C / string / eng
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Language
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The language of the track, in the Matroska languages
      form; see Section 12 on language codes.  This Element MUST be
      ignored if the LanguageBCP47 Element is used in the same
      TrackEntry.

5.1.4.1.20.  LanguageBCP47 Element

   id / type:  0x22B59D / string
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\LanguageBCP47
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The language of the track, in the [BCP47] form; form defined in
      [BCP47]; see Section 12 on language codes.  If this Element is
      used, then any Language Elements used in the same TrackEntry MUST
      be ignored.

5.1.4.1.21.  CodecID Element

   id / type:  0x86 / string
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  An ID corresponding to the codec, codec; see [MatroskaCodec]
      for more info.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.22.  CodecPrivate Element

   id / type:  0x63A2 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecPrivate
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Private data only known to the codec.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.23.  CodecName Element

   id / type:  0x258688 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecName
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A human-readable string specifying the codec.

5.1.4.1.24.  AttachmentLink Element

   id / type:  0x7446 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\AttachmentLink
   maxOccurs:  1
   maxver:  3
   definition:  The UID of an attachment that is used by this codec.
   usage notes:  The value MUST match the FileUID value of an attachment
      found in this Segment.

5.1.4.1.25.  CodecDelay Element

   id / type / default:  0x56AA / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecDelay
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  CodecDelay is  The codec-built-in delay, built-in delay for the codec, expressed in Matroska
      Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.  It represents
      the amount number of codec samples that will be discarded by the decoder
      during playback.  This timestamp value MUST be subtracted from
      each frame timestamp in order to get the timestamp that will be
      actually played.  The value SHOULD be small so the muxing of
      tracks with the same actual timestamp are in the same Cluster.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.26.  SeekPreRoll Element

   id / type / default:  0x56BB / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\SeekPreRoll
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  After a discontinuity, SeekPreRoll is the duration of the data that the
      decoder MUST decode before the decoded data is valid, expressed in
      Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.27.  TrackTranslate Element

   id / type:  0x6624 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackTranslate
   definition:  The mapping between this TrackEntry and a track value in
      the given Chapter Codec.
   rationale:  Chapter Codec may need to address content in a specific
      track, but they may not know of the way to identify tracks in
      Matroska.  This element and its child elements add a way to map
      the internal tracks known to the Chapter Codec to the track IDs in
      Matroska.  This allows remuxing a file with Chapter Codec without
      changing the content of the codec data, just the track mapping.

5.1.4.1.27.1.  TrackTranslateTrackID Element

   id / type:  0x66A5 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackTranslate\TrackTranslateTrackI
      D
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The binary value used to represent this TrackEntry in
      the chapter codec data.  The format depends on the
      ChapProcessCodecID used; see Section 5.1.7.1.4.15.

5.1.4.1.27.2.  TrackTranslateCodec Element

   id / type:  0x66BF / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackTranslate\TrackTranslateCodec
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  This TrackTranslate applies to this the chapter codec of the
      given chapter edition(s); see Section 5.1.7.1.4.15.
   defined values:  See Table 4.

         +=======+=================+============================+
         | value | label           | definition                 |
         +=======+=================+============================+
         | 0     | Matroska Script | Chapter commands using the |
         |       |                 | Matroska Script codec.     |
         +-------+-----------------+----------------------------+
         | 1     | DVD-menu        | Chapter commands using the |
         |       |                 | DVD-like codec.            |
         +-------+-----------------+----------------------------+

                   Table 4: TrackTranslateCodec values Values

5.1.4.1.27.3.  TrackTranslateEditionUID Element

   id / type:  0x66FC / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackTranslate\TrackTranslateEditio
      nUID
   definition:  Specify  Specifies a chapter edition UID on to which this
      TrackTranslate applies.
   usage notes:  When no TrackTranslateEditionUID is specified in the
      TrackTranslate, the TrackTranslate applies to all chapter editions
      found in the Segment using the given TrackTranslateCodec.

5.1.4.1.28.  Video Element

   id / type:  0xE0 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Video settings.

5.1.4.1.28.1.  FlagInterlaced Element

   id / type / default:  0x9A / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\FlagInterlaced
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  2
   definition:  Specify  Specifies whether the video frames in this track are
      interlaced.
   defined values:  See Table 5.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

            +=======+==============+==========================+
            | value | label        | definition               |
            +=======+==============+==========================+
            | 0     | undetermined | Unknown status.This status.  This    |
            |       |              | value SHOULD be avoided. |
            +-------+--------------+--------------------------+
            | 1     | interlaced   | Interlaced frames.       |
            +-------+--------------+--------------------------+
            | 2     | progressive  | No interlacing.          |
            +-------+--------------+--------------------------+

                       Table 5: FlagInterlaced values Values

5.1.4.1.28.2.  FieldOrder Element

   id / type / default:  0x9D / uinteger / 2
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\FieldOrder
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Specify  Specifies the field ordering of video frames in this
      track.
   defined values:  See Table 6.
   usage notes:  If FlagInterlaced is not set to 1, this Element MUST be
      ignored.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

    +=======+==============+=========================================+
    | value | label        | definition                              |
    +=======+==============+=========================================+
    | 0     | progressive  | Interlaced frames.This frames.  This value SHOULD be   |
    |       |              | avoided, be avoided; setting FlagInterlaced to 2 is |
    |       |              | is sufficient.                          |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+
    | 1     | tff          | Top field displayed first.  Top field   |
    |       |              | stored first.                           |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+
    | 2     | undetermined | Unknown field order.This order.  This value SHOULD |
    |       |              | be avoided.                             |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+
    | 6     | bff          | Bottom field displayed first.  Bottom   |
    |       |              | field stored first.                     |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+
    | 9     | bff(swapped) | Top field displayed first.  Fields are  |
    |       |              | interleaved in storage with the top     |
    |       |              | line of the top field stored first.     |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+
    | 14    | tff(swapped) | Bottom field displayed first.  Fields   |
    |       |              | are interleaved in storage with the top |
    |       |              | line of the top field stored first.     |
    +-------+--------------+-----------------------------------------+

                        Table 6: FieldOrder values Values

5.1.4.1.28.3.  StereoMode Element

   id / type / default:  0x53B8 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\StereoMode
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Stereo-3D video mode.  There are some more details in  See Section 18.10. 18.10 for more
      details.
   restrictions:  See Table 7.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

       +=======+===================================================+
       | value | label                                             |
       +=======+===================================================+
       | 0     | mono                                              |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 1     | side by side (left eye first)                     |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 2     | top - bottom (right eye is first)                 |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 3     | top - bottom (left eye is first)                  |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 4     | checkboard (right eye is first)                   |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 5     | checkboard (left eye is first)                    |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 6     | row interleaved (right eye is first)              |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 7     | row interleaved (left eye is first)               |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 8     | column interleaved (right eye is first)           |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 9     | column interleaved (left eye is first)            |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 10    | anaglyph (cyan/red)                               |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 11    | side by side (right eye first)                    |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 12    | anaglyph (green/magenta)                          |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 13    | both eyes laced in one Block (left eye is first)  |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+
       | 14    | both eyes laced in one Block (right eye is first) |
       +-------+---------------------------------------------------+

                         Table 7: StereoMode values Values

5.1.4.1.28.4.  AlphaMode Element

   id / type / default:  0x53C0 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\AlphaMode
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Indicate  Indicates whether the BlockAdditional Element with
      BlockAddID of "1" contains Alpha data, as defined by to the Codec
      Mapping for the CodecID.  Undefined values SHOULD NOT be used used, as
      the behavior of known implementations is different (considered
      either as 0 or 1).
   defined values:  See Table 8.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

     +=======+=========+============================================+
     | value | label   | definition                                 |
     +=======+=========+============================================+
     | 0     | none    | The BlockAdditional Element with           |
     |       |         | BlockAddID of "1" does not exist or SHOULD |
     |       |         | NOT be considered as containing such data. |
     +-------+---------+--------------------------------------------+
     | 1     | present | The BlockAdditional Element with           |
     |       |         | BlockAddID of "1" contains alpha channel   |
     |       |         | data.                                      |
     +-------+---------+--------------------------------------------+

                        Table 8: AlphaMode values Values

5.1.4.1.28.5.  OldStereoMode Element

   id / type:  0x53B9 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\OldStereoMode
   maxOccurs:  1
   maxver:  2
   definition:  Bogus StereoMode value used in old versions of
      libmatroska.
   restrictions:  See Table 9.
   usage notes:  This Element MUST NOT be used.  It was an incorrect
      value used in libmatroska up to 0.9.0.

                           +=======+===========+
                           | value | label     |
                           +=======+===========+
                           | 0     | mono      |
                           +-------+-----------+
                           | 1     | right eye |
                           +-------+-----------+
                           | 2     | left eye  |
                           +-------+-----------+
                           | 3     | both eyes |
                           +-------+-----------+

                           Table 9: OldStereoMode
                                   values
                                   Values

5.1.4.1.28.6.  PixelWidth Element

   id / type:  0xB0 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelWidth
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Width of the encoded video frames in pixels.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.7.  PixelHeight Element

   id / type:  0xBA / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelHeight
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Height of the encoded video frames in pixels.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.8.  PixelCropBottom Element

   id / type / default:  0x54AA / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelCropBottom
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The number of video pixels to remove at the bottom of
      the image.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.9.  PixelCropTop Element

   id / type / default:  0x54BB / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelCropTop
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The number of video pixels to remove at the top of the
      image.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.10.  PixelCropLeft Element

   id / type / default:  0x54CC / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelCropLeft
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The number of video pixels to remove on the left of the
      image.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.11.  PixelCropRight Element

   id / type / default:  0x54DD / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\PixelCropRight
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The number of video pixels to remove on the right of the
      image.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.12.  DisplayWidth Element

   id / type:  0x54B0 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\DisplayWidth
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Width of the video frames to display.  Applies to the
      video frame after cropping (PixelCrop* Elements).
   notes:  See Table 10.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

      +===========+=================================================+

     +===========+==================================================+
     | attribute | note                                             |
      +===========+=================================================+
     +===========+==================================================+
     | default   | If the DisplayUnit of the same TrackEntry is 0,  |
     |           | then the default value for DisplayWidth is equal |
     |           | equal toPixelWidth to PixelWidth - PixelCropLeft - PixelCropRight;  |
     |           | PixelCropRight, else else, there is no default value.                 |
      +-----------+-------------------------------------------------+
     +-----------+--------------------------------------------------+

               Table 10: DisplayWidth implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.4.1.28.13.  DisplayHeight Element

   id / type:  0x54BA / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\DisplayHeight
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Height of the video frames to display.  Applies to the
      video frame after cropping (PixelCrop* Elements).
   notes:  See Table 11.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

     +===========+==================================================+

     +===========+===================================================+
     | attribute | note                                              |
     +===========+==================================================+
     +===========+===================================================+
     | default   | If the DisplayUnit of the same TrackEntry is 0,   |
     |           | then the default value for DisplayHeight is equal |
     |           | equal toPixelHeight to PixelHeight - PixelCropTop - PixelCropBottom;  |
     |           | PixelCropBottom, else else, there is no default value.                  |
     +-----------+--------------------------------------------------+
     +-----------+---------------------------------------------------+

                Table 11: DisplayHeight implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.4.1.28.14.  DisplayUnit Element

   id / type / default:  0x54B2 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\DisplayUnit
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  How DisplayWidth & and DisplayHeight are interpreted.
   restrictions:  See Table 12.

                     +=======+======================+
                     | value | label                |
                     +=======+======================+
                     | 0     | pixels               |
                     +-------+----------------------+
                     | 1     | centimeters          |
                     +-------+----------------------+
                     | 2     | inches               |
                     +-------+----------------------+
                     | 3     | display aspect ratio |
                     +-------+----------------------+
                     | 4     | unknown              |
                     +-------+----------------------+

                       Table 12: DisplayUnit values Values

5.1.4.1.28.15.  UncompressedFourCC Element

   id / type:  0x2EB524 / binary
   length:  4
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\UncompressedFourCC
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  see implementation notes / 1
   definition:  Specify  Specifies the uncompressed pixel format used for the
      Track's data as a FourCC.  This value is similar in scope to the
      biCompression value of AVI's BITMAPINFO [AVIFormat].  There is no
      neither a definitive list of FourCC values, values nor an official
      registry.  Some common values for YUV pixel formats can be found
      at [MSYUV8],
      [MSYUV16] [MSYUV16], and [FourCC-YUV].  Some common values for
      uncompressed RGB pixel formats can be found at [MSRGB] and
      [FourCC-RGB].
   notes:  See Table 13.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

       +===========+==============================================+
       | attribute | note                                         |
       +===========+==============================================+
       | minOccurs | UncompressedFourCC MUST be set (minOccurs=1) |
       |           | in TrackEntry, TrackEntry when the CodecID Element of    |
       |           | the TrackEntry is set to "V_UNCOMPRESSED".   |
       +-----------+----------------------------------------------+

            Table 13: UncompressedFourCC implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.4.1.28.16.  Colour Element

   id / type:  0x55B0 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Settings describing the colour format.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.17.  MatrixCoefficients Element

   id / type / default:  0x55B1 / uinteger / 2
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MatrixCoefficients
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The Matrix Coefficients of the video used to derive luma
      and chroma values from red, green, and blue color primaries.  For
      clarity, the value and meanings for MatrixCoefficients are adopted
      from Table 4 of [ITU-H.273].
   restrictions:  See Table 14.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

             +=======+=======================================+
             | value | label                                 |
             +=======+=======================================+
             | 0     | Identity                              |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 1     | ITU-R BT.709                          |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 2     | unspecified                           |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 3     | reserved                              |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 4     | US FCC 73.682                         |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 5     | ITU-R BT.470BG                        |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 6     | SMPTE 170M                            |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 7     | SMPTE 240M                            |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 8     | YCoCg                                 |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 9     | BT2020 Non-constant Luminance         |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 10    | BT2020 Constant Luminance             |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 11    | SMPTE ST 2085                         |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 12    | Chroma-derived Non-constant Luminance |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 13    | Chroma-derived Constant Luminance     |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 14    | ITU-R BT.2100-0                       |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+

                    Table 14: MatrixCoefficients values Values

5.1.4.1.28.18.  BitsPerChannel Element

   id / type / default:  0x55B2 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\BitsPerChannel
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Number of decoded bits per channel.  A value of 0
      indicates that the BitsPerChannel is unspecified.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.19.  ChromaSubsamplingHorz Element

   id / type:  0x55B3 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\ChromaSubsamplingHorz
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The amount number of pixels to remove in the Cr and Cb channels
      for every pixel not removed horizontally.  Example: For video with
      4:2:0 chroma subsampling, the ChromaSubsamplingHorz SHOULD be set
      to 1.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.20.  ChromaSubsamplingVert Element

   id / type:  0x55B4 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\ChromaSubsamplingVert
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The amount number of pixels to remove in the Cr and Cb channels
      for every pixel not removed vertically.  Example: For video with
      4:2:0 chroma subsampling, the ChromaSubsamplingVert SHOULD be set
      to 1.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.21.  CbSubsamplingHorz Element

   id / type:  0x55B5 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\CbSubsamplingHorz
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The amount number of pixels to remove in the Cb channel for
      every pixel not removed horizontally.  This is additive with
      ChromaSubsamplingHorz.  Example: For video with 4:2:1 chroma
      subsampling, the ChromaSubsamplingHorz SHOULD be set to 1 1, and
      CbSubsamplingHorz SHOULD be set to 1.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.22.  CbSubsamplingVert Element

   id / type:  0x55B6 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\CbSubsamplingVert
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The amount number of pixels to remove in the Cb channel for
      every pixel not removed vertically.  This is additive with
      ChromaSubsamplingVert.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.23.  ChromaSitingHorz Element

   id / type / default:  0x55B7 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\ChromaSitingHorz
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  How chroma is subsampled horizontally.
   restrictions:  See Table 15.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

                        +=======+=================+
                        | value | label           |
                        +=======+=================+
                        | 0     | unspecified     |
                        +-------+-----------------+
                        | 1     | left collocated |
                        +-------+-----------------+
                        | 2     | half            |
                        +-------+-----------------+

                                 Table 15:
                          ChromaSitingHorz values Values

5.1.4.1.28.24.  ChromaSitingVert Element

   id / type / default:  0x55B8 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\ChromaSitingVert
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  How chroma is subsampled vertically.
   restrictions:  See Table 16.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

                        +=======+================+
                        | value | label          |
                        +=======+================+
                        | 0     | unspecified    |
                        +-------+----------------+
                        | 1     | top collocated |
                        +-------+----------------+
                        | 2     | half           |
                        +-------+----------------+

                                Table 16:
                             ChromaSitingVert
                                  values
                                  Values

5.1.4.1.28.25.  Range Element

   id / type / default:  0x55B9 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\Range
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Clipping of the color ranges.
   restrictions:  See Table 17.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

    +=======+=========================================================+
    | value | label                                                   |
    +=======+=========================================================+
    | 0     | unspecified                                             |
    +-------+---------------------------------------------------------+
    | 1     | broadcast range                                         |
    +-------+---------------------------------------------------------+
    | 2     | full range (no clipping)                                |
    +-------+---------------------------------------------------------+
    | 3     | defined by MatrixCoefficients / TransferCharacteristics |
    +-------+---------------------------------------------------------+

                           Table 17: Range values Values

5.1.4.1.28.26.  TransferCharacteristics Element

   id / type / default:  0x55BA / uinteger / 2
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\TransferCharacteristic
      s
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The transfer characteristics of the video.  For clarity,
      the value and meanings for TransferCharacteristics are adopted
      from Table 3 of [ITU-H.273].
   restrictions:  See Table 18.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

             +=======+=======================================+
             | value | label                                 |
             +=======+=======================================+
             | 0     | reserved                              |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 1     | ITU-R BT.709                          |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 2     | unspecified                           |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 3     | reserved2                             |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 4     | Gamma 2.2 curve - BT.470M             |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 5     | Gamma 2.8 curve - BT.470BG            |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 6     | SMPTE 170M                            |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 7     | SMPTE 240M                            |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 8     | Linear                                |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 9     | Log                                   |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 10    | Log Sqrt                              |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 11    | IEC 61966-2-4                         |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 12    | ITU-R BT.1361 Extended Colour Gamut   |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 13    | IEC 61966-2-1                         |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 14    | ITU-R BT.2020 10 bit                  |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 15    | ITU-R BT.2020 12 bit                  |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 16    | ITU-R BT.2100 Perceptual Quantization |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 17    | SMPTE ST 428-1                        |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+
             | 18    | ARIB STD-B67 (HLG)                    |
             +-------+---------------------------------------+

                  Table 18: TransferCharacteristics values Values

5.1.4.1.28.27.  Primaries Element

   id / type / default:  0x55BB / uinteger / 2
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\Primaries
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The colour primaries of the video.  For clarity, the
      value and meanings for Primaries are adopted from Table 2 of
      [ITU-H.273].
   restrictions:  See Table 19.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

            +=======+========================================+
            | value | label                                  |
            +=======+========================================+
            | 0     | reserved                               |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 1     | ITU-R BT.709                           |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 2     | unspecified                            |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 3     | reserved2                              |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 4     | ITU-R BT.470M                          |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 5     | ITU-R BT.470BG - BT.601 625            |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 6     | ITU-R BT.601 525 - SMPTE 170M          |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 7     | SMPTE 240M                             |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 8     | FILM                                   |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 9     | ITU-R BT.2020                          |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 10    | SMPTE ST 428-1                         |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 11    | SMPTE RP 432-2                         |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 12    | SMPTE EG 432-2                         |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+
            | 22    | EBU Tech. 3213-E - JEDEC P22 phosphors |
            +-------+----------------------------------------+

                        Table 19: Primaries values Values

5.1.4.1.28.28.  MaxCLL Element

   id / type:  0x55BC / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MaxCLL
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Maximum brightness of a single pixel (Maximum Content
      Light Level) in candelas per square meter (cd/m^2).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.29.  MaxFALL Element

   id / type:  0x55BD / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MaxFALL
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Maximum brightness of a single full frame (Maximum
      Frame-Average Light Level) in candelas per square meter (cd/m^2).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.30.  MasteringMetadata Element

   id / type:  0x55D0 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  SMPTE 2086 mastering data.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.31.  PrimaryRChromaticityX Element

   id / type:  0x55D1 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryRChromaticityX
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Red X chromaticity coordinate, as defined by [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.32.  PrimaryRChromaticityY Element

   id / type:  0x55D2 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryRChromaticityY
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Red Y chromaticity coordinate, as defined by [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.33.  PrimaryGChromaticityX Element

   id / type:  0x55D3 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryGChromaticityX
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Green X chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.34.  PrimaryGChromaticityY Element

   id / type:  0x55D4 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryGChromaticityY
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Green Y chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.35.  PrimaryBChromaticityX Element

   id / type:  0x55D5 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryBChromaticityX
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Blue X chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.36.  PrimaryBChromaticityY Element

   id / type:  0x55D6 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Prim
      aryBChromaticityY
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Blue Y chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.37.  WhitePointChromaticityX Element

   id / type:  0x55D7 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Whit
      ePointChromaticityX
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  White X chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.38.  WhitePointChromaticityY Element

   id / type:  0x55D8 / float
   range:  0x0p+0-0x1p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Whit
      ePointChromaticityY
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  White Y chromaticity coordinate, as defined by
      [CIE-1931].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.39.  LuminanceMax Element

   id / type:  0x55D9 / float
   range:  >= 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Lumi
      nanceMax
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Maximum luminance.  Represented in candelas per square
      meter (cd/m^2).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.40.  LuminanceMin Element

   id / type:  0x55DA / float
   range:  >= 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Colour\MasteringMetadata\Lumi
      nanceMin
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Minimum luminance.  Represented in candelas per square
      meter (cd/m^2).
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.41.  Projection Element

   id / type:  0x7670 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Describes the video projection details.  Used to render
      spherical,
      spherical or VR videos or flipping to flip videos horizontally/vertically. horizontally or
      vertically.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.42.  ProjectionType Element

   id / type / default:  0x7671 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection\ProjectionType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Describes the projection used for this video track.
   restrictions:  See Table 20.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

                        +=======+=================+
                        | value | label           |
                        +=======+=================+
                        | 0     | rectangular     |
                        +-------+-----------------+
                        | 1     | equirectangular |
                        +-------+-----------------+
                        | 2     | cubemap         |
                        +-------+-----------------+
                        | 3     | mesh            |
                        +-------+-----------------+

                                 Table 20:
                           ProjectionType values Values

5.1.4.1.28.43.  ProjectionPrivate Element

   id / type:  0x7672 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection\ProjectionPrivate
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Private data that only applies to a specific projection.
      *  If ProjectionType equals 0 (Rectangular), (rectangular), then this element
         MUST NOT be present.
      *  If ProjectionType equals 1 (Equirectangular), (equirectangular), then this element
         MUST be present and contain the same binary data that would be
         stored inside an ISOBMFF Equirectangular Projection Box ('equi').
         ("equi").
      *  If ProjectionType equals 2 (Cubemap), (cubemap), then this element MUST be
         present and contain the same binary data that would be stored
         inside an ISOBMFF Cubemap Projection Box ('cbmp'). ("cbmp").
      *  If ProjectionType equals 3 (Mesh), (mesh), then this element MUST be
         present and contain the same binary data that would be stored
         inside an ISOBMFF Mesh Projection Box ('mshp'). ("mshp").
   usage notes:  ISOBMFF box size and fourcc fields are not included in
      the binary data, but the FullBox version and flag fields are.
      This is to avoid redundant framing information while preserving
      versioning and semantics between the two container formats.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.44.  ProjectionPoseYaw Element

   id / type / default:  0x7673 / float / 0x0p+0
   range:  >= -0xB4p+0, <= 0xB4p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection\ProjectionPoseYaw
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Specifies a yaw rotation to the projection.

   Value represents a clockwise rotation, in degrees, around the up
   vector.  This rotation must be applied before any ProjectionPosePitch
   or ProjectionPoseRoll rotations.  The value of this element MUST be
   in the -180 to 180 degree range, both included.

   Setting ProjectionPoseYaw to 180 or -180 degrees, degrees with the
   ProjectionPoseRoll and ProjectionPosePitch set to 0 degrees flips the
   image horizontally.

   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.45.  ProjectionPosePitch Element

   id / type / default:  0x7674 / float / 0x0p+0
   range:  >= -0x5Ap+0, <= 0x5Ap+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection\ProjectionPosePitc
      h
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Specifies a pitch rotation to the projection.

   Value represents a counter-clockwise rotation, in degrees, around the
   right vector.  This rotation must be applied after the
   ProjectionPoseYaw rotation and before the ProjectionPoseRoll
   rotation.  The value of this element MUST be in the -90 to 90 degree
   range, both included.

   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.28.46.  ProjectionPoseRoll Element

   id / type / default:  0x7675 / float / 0x0p+0
   range:  >= -0xB4p+0, <= 0xB4p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\Projection\ProjectionPoseRoll
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Specifies a roll rotation to the projection.

   Value represents a counter-clockwise rotation, in degrees, around the
   forward vector.  This rotation must be applied after the
   ProjectionPoseYaw and ProjectionPosePitch rotations.  The value of
   this element MUST be in the -180 to 180 degree range, both included.

   Setting ProjectionPoseRoll to 180 or -180 degrees, the degrees and
   ProjectionPoseYaw to 180 or -180 degrees with ProjectionPosePitch set
   to 0 degrees flips the image vertically.

   Setting ProjectionPoseRoll to 180 or -180 degrees, degrees with the
   ProjectionPoseYaw and ProjectionPosePitch set to 0 degrees flips the
   image horizontally and vertically.

   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.29.  Audio Element

   id / type:  0xE1 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Audio settings.

5.1.4.1.29.1.  SamplingFrequency Element

   id / type / default:  0xB5 / float / 0x1.f4p+12
   range:  > 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio\SamplingFrequency
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Sampling frequency in Hz.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.29.2.  OutputSamplingFrequency Element

   id / type:  0x78B5 / float
   range:  > 0x0p+0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio\OutputSamplingFrequency
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Real output sampling frequency in Hz (used for SBR
      techniques).
   notes:  See Table 21.

   +===========+======================================================+
   | attribute | note                                                 |
   +===========+======================================================+
   | default   | The default value for OutputSamplingFrequency of the |
   |           | same TrackEntry is equal to the SamplingFrequency.   |
   +-----------+------------------------------------------------------+

          Table 21: OutputSamplingFrequency implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.4.1.29.3.  Channels Element

   id / type / default:  0x9F / uinteger / 1
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio\Channels
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Numbers of channels in the track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.29.4.  BitDepth Element

   id / type:  0x6264 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio\BitDepth
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Bits per sample, mostly used for PCM.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.  TrackOperation Element

   id / type:  0xE2 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Operation that needs to be applied on tracks to create
      this virtual track.  For more details look at details, see Section 18.8.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.1.  TrackCombinePlanes Element

   id / type:  0xE3 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackCombinePlanes
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Contains the list of all video plane tracks that need to
      be combined to create this 3D track track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.2.  TrackPlane Element

   id / type:  0xE4 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackCombinePlanes\T
      rackPlane
   minOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Contains a video plane track that need needs to be combined
      to create this 3D track track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.3.  TrackPlaneUID Element

   id / type:  0xE5 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackCombinePlanes\T
      rackPlane\TrackPlaneUID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  3
   definition:  The trackUID number of the track representing the plane.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.4.  TrackPlaneType Element

   id / type:  0xE6 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackCombinePlanes\T
      rackPlane\TrackPlaneType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  3
   definition:  The kind of plane this track corresponds to.
   restrictions:  See Table 22.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

                           +=======+============+
                           | value | label      |
                           +=======+============+
                           | 0     | left eye   |
                           +-------+------------+
                           | 1     | right eye  |
                           +-------+------------+
                           | 2     | background |
                           +-------+------------+

                                 Table 22:
                           TrackPlaneType values Values

5.1.4.1.30.5.  TrackJoinBlocks Element

   id / type:  0xE9 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackJoinBlocks
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  Contains the list of all tracks whose Blocks need to be
      combined to create this virtual track track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.30.6.  TrackJoinUID Element

   id / type:  0xED / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOperation\TrackJoinBlocks\Trac
      kJoinUID
   minOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  The trackUID number of a track whose blocks are used to
      create this virtual track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.  ContentEncodings Element

   id / type:  0x6D80 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Settings for several content encoding mechanisms like
      compression or encryption.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.1.  ContentEncoding Element

   id / type:  0x6240 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Settings for one content encoding like compression or
      encryption.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.2.  ContentEncodingOrder Element

   id / type / default:  0x5031 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncodingOrder
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Tell in which order to apply each ContentEncoding of the
      ContentEncodings.  The decoder/demuxer MUST start with the
      ContentEncoding with the highest ContentEncodingOrder and work its
      way down to the ContentEncoding with the lowest
      ContentEncodingOrder.  This value MUST be unique over for each
      ContentEncoding found in the ContentEncodings of this TrackEntry.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.3.  ContentEncodingScope Element

   id / type / default:  0x5032 / uinteger / 1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncodingScope
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A bit field that describes which Elements have been
      modified in this way.  Values (big-endian) can be OR'ed.
   defined values:  See Table 23.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

      +=======+=========+===========================================+

     +=======+=========+============================================+
     | value | label   | definition                                 |
      +=======+=========+===========================================+
     +=======+=========+============================================+
     | 1     | Block   | All frame contents, excluding lacing      |
      |       |         | data. |
      +-------+---------+-------------------------------------------+
     +-------+---------+--------------------------------------------+
     | 2     | Private | The track's CodecPrivate data.             |
      +-------+---------+-------------------------------------------+
     +-------+---------+--------------------------------------------+
     | 4     | Next    | The next ContentEncoding (next             |
     |       |         | ContentEncodingOrder.  Either ContentEncodingOrder; the data inside      |
     |       |         | inside ContentCompression and/or                  |
     |       |         | ContentEncryption).This ContentEncryption).  This value SHOULD NOT |
     |       |         | be used used, as it's not supported by players. |
      +-------+---------+-------------------------------------------+
     +-------+---------+--------------------------------------------+

                  Table 23: ContentEncodingScope values Values

5.1.4.1.31.4.  ContentEncodingType Element

   id / type / default:  0x5033 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncodingType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A value describing what the kind of transformation that is
      applied.
   restrictions:  See Table 24.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

                          +=======+=============+
                          | value | label       |
                          +=======+=============+
                          | 0     | Compression |
                          +-------+-------------+
                          | 1     | Encryption  |
                          +-------+-------------+

                                 Table 24:
                            ContentEncodingType
                                   values
                                   Values

5.1.4.1.31.5.  ContentCompression Element

   id / type:  0x5034 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentCompression
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Settings describing the compression used.  This Element
      MUST be present if the value of ContentEncodingType is 0 and
      absent otherwise.  Each block MUST be decompressable decompressable, even if no
      previous block is available in order not to not prevent seeking.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.6.  ContentCompAlgo Element

   id / type / default:  0x4254 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentCompression\ContentCompAlgo
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The compression algorithm used.
   defined values:  See Table 25.
   usage notes:  Compression method "1" (bzlib) and "2" (lzo1x) are
      lacking lack
      proper documentation on the format format, which limits implementation
      possibilities.  Due to licensing conflicts on commonly available libraries
      libraries' compression methods methods, "2" (lzo1x) does not offer
      widespread interoperability.  A Matroska Writer SHOULD NOT use
      these compression methods by default.  A Matroska Reader MAY
      support methods "1" and "2" as possible, possible and SHOULD support other
      methods.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

      +=======+===========+=========================================+
      | value | label     | definition                              |
      +=======+===========+=========================================+
      | 0     | zlib      | zlib compression [RFC1950].             |
      +-------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
      | 1     | bzlib     | bzip2 compression [BZIP2], [BZIP2] SHOULD NOT be |
      |       |           | be used; see usage notes.                  |
      +-------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
      | 2     | lzo1x     | Lempel-Ziv-Oberhumer compression [LZO], |
      |       |           | SHOULD NOT be used; see usage notes.    |
      +-------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+
      | 3     | Header    | Octets in ContentCompSettings           |
      |       | Stripping | (Section 5.1.4.1.31.7) have been        |
      |       |           | stripped from each frame.               |
      +-------+-----------+-----------------------------------------+

                      Table 25: ContentCompAlgo values Values

5.1.4.1.31.7.  ContentCompSettings Element

   id / type:  0x4255 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentCompression\ContentCompSettings
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Settings that might be needed by the decompressor.  For
      Header Stripping (ContentCompAlgo=3), the bytes that were removed
      from the beginning of each frames frame of the track.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.8.  ContentEncryption Element

   id / type:  0x5035 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Settings describing the encryption used.  This Element
      MUST be present if the value of ContentEncodingType is 1
      (encryption) and MUST be ignored otherwise.  A Matroska Player MAY
      support encryption.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.9.  ContentEncAlgo Element

   id / type / default:  0x47E1 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentEncAlgo
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The encryption algorithm used.
   defined values:  See Table 26.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

   +=======+===============+===========================================+

    +=======+===========+============================================+
    | value | label     | definition                                 |
   +=======+===============+===========================================+
    +=======+===========+============================================+
    | 0     | Not       | The data are not encrypted.                |
    |       | encrypted |                                            |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+
    | 1     | DES       | Data Encryption Standard (DES) [FIPS46-3]. |
    |       |           | [FIPS.46-3].This This value SHOULD be avoided.              |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+
    | 2     | 3DES      | Triple Data Encryption Algorithm           |
    |       |           | [SP.800-67].This [SP800-67].  This value SHOULD be avoided. |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+
    | 3     | Twofish   | Twofish Encryption Algorithm [Twofish].    |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+
    | 4     | Blowfish  | Blowfish Encryption Algorithm [Blowfish].  |
    |       |           | [Blowfish].This This value SHOULD be avoided.              |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+
    | 5     | AES       | Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)         |
    |       |           | [FIPS.197]. [FIPS197].                                 |
   +-------+---------------+-------------------------------------------+
    +-------+-----------+--------------------------------------------+

                     Table 26: ContentEncAlgo values Values

5.1.4.1.31.10.  ContentEncKeyID Element

   id / type:  0x47E2 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentEncKeyID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  For public key algorithms this is algorithms, the ID of the public key that
      the data was encrypted with.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.4.1.31.11.  ContentEncAESSettings Element

   id / type:  0x47E7 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentEncAESSettings
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  Settings describing the encryption algorithm used.
   notes:  See Table 27.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

      +===========+=================================================+
      | attribute | note                                            |
      +===========+=================================================+
      | maxOccurs | ContentEncAESSettings MUST NOT be set           |
      |           | (maxOccurs=0) if ContentEncAlgo is not AES (5). |
      +-----------+-------------------------------------------------+

            Table 27: ContentEncAESSettings implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.4.1.31.12.  AESSettingsCipherMode Element

   id / type:  0x47E8 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentEncAESSettings\AESSettingsCipherMode
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The AES cipher mode used in the encryption.
   defined values:  See Table 28.
   notes:  See Table 29.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)
         +=======+=========+=====================================+

          +=======+=========+===================================+
          | value | label   | definition                        |
         +=======+=========+=====================================+
          +=======+=========+===================================+
          | 1     | AES-CTR | Counter [SP.800-38A]. [SP800-38A]               |
         +-------+---------+-------------------------------------+
          +-------+---------+-----------------------------------+
          | 2     | AES-CBC | Cipher Block Chaining [SP.800-38A]. [SP800-38A] |
         +-------+---------+-------------------------------------+
          +-------+---------+-----------------------------------+

                   Table 28: AESSettingsCipherMode values Values

      +===========+=================================================+
      | attribute | note                                            |
      +===========+=================================================+
      | maxOccurs | AESSettingsCipherMode MUST NOT be set           |
      |           | (maxOccurs=0) if ContentEncAlgo is not AES (5). |
      +-----------+-------------------------------------------------+

            Table 29: AESSettingsCipherMode implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.5.  Cues Element

   id / type:  0x1C53BB6B / master
   path:  \Segment\Cues
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  see implementation notes / 1
   definition:  A Top-Level Element to speed seeking access.  All
      entries are local to the Segment.
   notes:  See Table 30.

    +===========+====================================================+
    | attribute | note                                               |
    +===========+====================================================+
    | minOccurs | This Element SHOULD be set when the Segment is not |
    |           | transmitted as a live stream; see Section 23.2.    |
    +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+

                   Table 30: Cues implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.5.1.  CuePoint Element

   id / type:  0xBB / master
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contains all information relative to a seek point in the
      Segment.

5.1.5.1.1.  CueTime Element

   id / type:  0xB3 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTime
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Absolute timestamp of the seek point, expressed in
      Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.

5.1.5.1.2.  CueTrackPositions Element

   id / type:  0xB7 / master
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contain  Contains positions for different tracks corresponding to
      the timestamp.

5.1.5.1.2.1.  CueTrack Element

   id / type:  0xF7 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueTrack
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The track for which a position is given.

5.1.5.1.2.2.  CueClusterPosition Element

   id / type:  0xF1 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueClusterPosition
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The Segment Position (Section 16) of the Cluster
      containing the associated Block.

5.1.5.1.2.3.  CueRelativePosition Element

   id / type:  0xF0 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueRelativePosition
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The relative position inside the Cluster of the
      referenced SimpleBlock or BlockGroup with 0 being the first
      possible position for an Element inside that Cluster.

5.1.5.1.2.4.  CueDuration Element

   id / type:  0xB2 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueDuration
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The duration of the block, expressed in Segment Ticks Ticks,
      which is are based on TimestampScale; see Section 11.1.  If missing,
      the track's DefaultDuration does not apply and no duration
      information is available in terms of the cues.

5.1.5.1.2.5.  CueBlockNumber Element

   id / type:  0x5378 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueBlockNumber
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Number of the Block in the specified Cluster.

5.1.5.1.2.6.  CueCodecState Element

   id / type / default:  0xEA / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueCodecState
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  2
   definition:  The Segment Position (Section 16) of the Codec State
      corresponding to this Cue Element. 0 means that the data is taken
      from the initial Track Entry.

5.1.5.1.2.7.  CueReference Element

   id / type:  0xDB / master
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueReference
   minver:  2
   definition:  The Clusters containing the referenced Blocks.

5.1.5.1.2.8.  CueRefTime Element

   id / type:  0x96 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueReference\CueRefTi
      me
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   minver:  2
   definition:  Timestamp of the referenced Block, expressed in Matroska
      Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.

5.1.6.  Attachments Element

   id / type:  0x1941A469 / master
   path:  \Segment\Attachments
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contain  Contains attached files.

5.1.6.1.  AttachedFile Element

   id / type:  0x61A7 / master
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  An attached file.

5.1.6.1.1.  FileDescription Element

   id / type:  0x467E / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileDescription
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A human-friendly name for the attached file.

5.1.6.1.2.  FileName Element

   id / type:  0x466E / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileName
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Filename of the attached file.

5.1.6.1.3.  FileMediaType Element

   id / type:  0x4660 / string
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileMediaType
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Media type of the file following the [RFC6838] format. format described in
      [RFC6838].
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.6.1.4.  FileData Element

   id / type:  0x465C / binary
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileData
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The data of the file.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.6.1.5.  FileUID Element

   id / type:  0x46AE / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileUID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Unique ID  UID representing the file, as random as possible.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.7.  Chapters Element

   id / type:  0x1043A770 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters
   maxOccurs:  1
   recurring:  True
   definition:  A system to define basic menus and partition data.  For
      more detailed information, look at the Chapters explanation in see Section 20.

5.1.7.1.  EditionEntry Element

   id / type:  0x45B9 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  Contains all information about a Segment edition.

5.1.7.1.1.  EditionUID Element

   id / type:  0x45BC / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\EditionUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the edition.  It's useful for tagging
      an edition.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.7.1.2.  EditionFlagDefault Element

   id / type / default:  0x45DB / uinteger / 0
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\EditionFlagDefault
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Set to 1 if the edition SHOULD be used as the default
      one.

5.1.7.1.3.  EditionFlagOrdered Element

   id / type / default:  0x45DD / uinteger / 0
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\EditionFlagOrdered
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Set to 1 if the chapters can be defined multiple times
      and the order to play them is enforced; see Section 20.1.3.

5.1.7.1.4.  ChapterAtom Element

   id / type:  0xB6 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom
   minOccurs:  1
   recursive:  True
   definition:  Contains the atom information to use as the chapter atom
      (apply
      (applies to all tracks).

5.1.7.1.4.1.  ChapterUID Element

   id / type:  0x73C4 / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterUID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the Chapter.
   stream copy:  True (Section 8)

5.1.7.1.4.2.  ChapterStringUID Element

   id / type:  0x5654 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterStringUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  3
   definition:  A unique string ID to identify the Chapter.  For example
      example, it is used as the storage for [WebVTT] cue identifier values. values
      [WebVTT].

5.1.7.1.4.3.  ChapterTimeStart Element

   id / type:  0x91 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterTimeStart
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Timestamp of the start of Chapter, expressed in Matroska
      Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.

5.1.7.1.4.4.  ChapterTimeEnd Element

   id / type:  0x92 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterTimeEnd
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  see implementation notes / 1
   definition:  Timestamp of the end of Chapter timestamp excluded,
      expressed in Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see
      Section 11.1.  The value MUST be greater than or equal to the
      ChapterTimeStart of the same ChapterAtom.
   usage notes:  The  With the ChapterTimeEnd timestamp value being excluded,
      it MUST take in into account the duration of the last frame it
      includes, especially for the ChapterAtom using the last frames of
      the Segment.
   notes:  See Table 31.

    +===========+====================================================+
    | attribute | note                                               |
    +===========+====================================================+
    | minOccurs | ChapterTimeEnd MUST be set (minOccurs=1) if the    |
    |           | Edition is an ordered edition; see Section 20.1.3, 20.1.3. |
    |           | unless If it's a Parent Chapter; Chapter, see Section 20.2.3 20.2.3.      |
    +-----------+----------------------------------------------------+

              Table 31: ChapterTimeEnd implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.7.1.4.5.  ChapterFlagHidden Element

   id / type / default:  0x98 / uinteger / 0
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterFlagHidden
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Set to 1 if a chapter is hidden.  Hidden chapters SHOULD
      NOT be available to the user interface (but still to Control
      Tracks; see Section 20.2.5 on Chapter flags).

5.1.7.1.4.6.  ChapterSegmentUUID Element

   id / type:  0x6E67 / binary
   length:  16
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterSegmentUUID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  see implementation notes / 1
   definition:  The SegmentUUID of another Segment to play during this
      chapter.
   usage notes:  The value MUST NOT be the SegmentUUID value of the
      Segment it belongs to.
   notes:  See Table 32.

       +===========+==============================================+
       | attribute | note                                         |
       +===========+==============================================+
       | minOccurs | ChapterSegmentUUID MUST be set (minOccurs=1) |
       |           | if ChapterSegmentEditionUID is used; see     |
       |           | Section 17.2 on medium-linking Medium-Linking Segments.     |
       +-----------+----------------------------------------------+

            Table 32: ChapterSegmentUUID implementation notes Implementation Notes

5.1.7.1.4.7.  ChapterSegmentEditionUID Element

   id / type:  0x6EBC / uinteger
   range:  not 0
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterSegmentEdit
      ionUID
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  The EditionUID to play from the Segment linked in
      ChapterSegmentUUID.  If ChapterSegmentEditionUID is undeclared,
      then no Edition of the linked Segment is used; see Section 17.2 on
      medium-linking
      Medium-Linking Segments.

5.1.7.1.4.8.  ChapterPhysicalEquiv Element

   id / type:  0x63C3 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterPhysicalEqu
      iv
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Specify  Specifies the physical equivalent of this ChapterAtom like ChapterAtom,
      e.g., "DVD" (60) or "SIDE" (50); see Section 20.4 for a complete
      list of values.

5.1.7.1.4.9.  ChapterDisplay Element

   id / type:  0x80 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterDisplay
   definition:  Contains all possible strings to use for the chapter
      display.

5.1.7.1.4.10.  ChapString Element

   id / type:  0x85 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterDisplay\Cha
      pString
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Contains the string to use as the chapter atom.

5.1.7.1.4.11.  ChapLanguage Element

   id / type / default:  0x437C / string / eng
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterDisplay\Cha
      pLanguage
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  A language corresponding to the string, in the Matroska
      languages form; see Section 12 on language codes.  This Element
      MUST be ignored if a ChapLanguageBCP47 Element is used within the
      same ChapterDisplay Element.

5.1.7.1.4.12.  ChapLanguageBCP47 Element

   id / type:  0x437D / string
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterDisplay\Cha
      pLanguageBCP47
   minver:  4
   definition:  A language corresponding to the ChapString, in the
      [BCP47] form; form
      defined in [BCP47]; see Section 12 on language codes.  If a
      ChapLanguageBCP47 Element is used, then any ChapLanguage and
      ChapCountry Elements used in the same ChapterDisplay MUST be
      ignored.

5.1.7.1.4.13.  ChapCountry Element

   id / type:  0x437E / string
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapterDisplay\Cha
      pCountry
   definition:  A country corresponding to the string, in the Matroska
      countries form; see Section 13 on country codes.  This Element
      MUST be ignored if a ChapLanguageBCP47 Element is used within the
      same ChapterDisplay Element.

5.1.7.1.4.14.  ChapProcess Element

   id / type:  0x6944 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess
   definition:  Contains all the commands associated to the Atom.

5.1.7.1.4.15.  ChapProcessCodecID Element

   id / type / default:  0x6955 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess\ChapPr
      ocessCodecID
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Contains the type of the codec used for the processing.  A
      value of 0 means built-in Matroska processing (to be defined), and
      a value of 1 means the DVD command set is used; see Section 20.3
      on DVD menus.  More codec IDs can be added later.

5.1.7.1.4.16.  ChapProcessPrivate Element

   id / type:  0x450D / binary
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess\ChapPr
      ocessPrivate
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  Some optional  Optional data attached to the ChapProcessCodecID
      information.  For ChapProcessCodecID = 1, it is the "DVD level"
      equivalent; see Section 20.3 on DVD menus.

5.1.7.1.4.17.  ChapProcessCommand Element

   id / type:  0x6911 / master
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess\ChapPr
      ocessCommand
   definition:  Contains all the commands associated to with the Atom.

5.1.7.1.4.18.  ChapProcessTime Element

   id / type:  0x6922 / uinteger
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess\ChapPr
      ocessCommand\ChapProcessTime
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Defines when the process command SHOULD be handled handled.
   restrictions:  See Table 33.

                 +=======+===============================+
                 | value | label                         |
                 +=======+===============================+
                 | 0     | during the whole chapter      |
                 +-------+-------------------------------+
                 | 1     | before starting playback      |
                 +-------+-------------------------------+
                 | 2     | after playback of the chapter |
                 +-------+-------------------------------+

                      Table 33: ChapProcessTime values Values

5.1.7.1.4.19.  ChapProcessData Element

   id / type:  0x6933 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Chapters\EditionEntry\+ChapterAtom\ChapProcess\ChapPr
      ocessCommand\ChapProcessData
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Contains the command information.  The data SHOULD be
      interpreted depending on the ChapProcessCodecID value.  For
      ChapProcessCodecID = 1, the data correspond to the binary DVD cell
      pre/post commands; see Section 20.3 on DVD menus.

5.1.8.  Tags Element

   id / type:  0x1254C367 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tags
   definition:  Element containing metadata describing Tracks, Editions,
      Chapters, Attachments, or the Segment as a whole.  A list of valid
      tags can be found in [MatroskaTags].

5.1.8.1.  Tag Element

   id / type:  0x7373 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag
   minOccurs:  1
   definition:  A single metadata descriptor.

5.1.8.1.1.  Targets Element

   id / type:  0x63C0 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Specifies which other elements the metadata represented
      by the Tag applies to.  If empty or omitted, then the Tag
      describes everything in the Segment.

5.1.8.1.1.1.  TargetTypeValue Element

   id / type / default:  0x68CA / uinteger / 50
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TargetTypeValue
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A number to indicate the logical level of the target.
   defined values:

      +=======+===================+=================================+  See Table 34.

   +=======+==========================+================================+
   | value | label                    | definition                     |
      +=======+===================+=================================+
   +=======+==========================+================================+
   | 70    | COLLECTION               | The highest hierarchical level |
   |       |                          | that tags can describe.        |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 60    | EDITION / ISSUE /        | A list of lower levels grouped |
   |       | VOLUME / OPUS /          | together.                      |
   |       | SEASON / SEQUEL          |                                |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 50    | ALBUM / OPERA /          | The most common grouping level |
   |       | CONCERT / MOVIE /        | of music and video (equals to (e.g., an   |
   |       | EPISODE                  | an episode for TV series).        |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 40    | PART / SESSION           | When an album or episode has   |
   |       |                          | different logical parts.       |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 30    | TRACK / SONG /           | The common parts of an album or   |
   |       | CHAPTER                  | or movie.                      |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 20    | SUBTRACK /               | Corresponds to parts of a track      |
   |       | MOVEMENT / SCENE         | track for audio like a movement, or audio, such as a     |
   |       |                          | movement or scene in a movie.  |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+
   | 10    | SHOT                     | The lowest hierarchy found in  |
   |       |                          | music or movies.               |
      +-------+-------------------+---------------------------------+
   +-------+--------------------------+--------------------------------+

                      Table 34: TargetTypeValue values Values

5.1.8.1.1.2.  TargetType Element

   id / type:  0x63CA / string
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TargetType
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  An informational string that can be used to display the
      logical level of the target like target, such as "ALBUM", "TRACK", "MOVIE",
      "CHAPTER", etc.
   restrictions:  See Table 35.

                    +============+====================+
                    | value      | label              |
                    +============+====================+
                    | COLLECTION | TargetTypeValue 70 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | EDITION    | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | ISSUE      | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | VOLUME     | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | OPUS       | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SEASON     | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SEQUEL     | TargetTypeValue 60 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | ALBUM      | TargetTypeValue 50 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | OPERA      | TargetTypeValue 50 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | CONCERT    | TargetTypeValue 50 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | MOVIE      | TargetTypeValue 50 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | EPISODE    | TargetTypeValue 50 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | PART       | TargetTypeValue 40 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SESSION    | TargetTypeValue 40 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | TRACK      | TargetTypeValue 30 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SONG       | TargetTypeValue 30 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | CHAPTER    | TargetTypeValue 30 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SUBTRACK   | TargetTypeValue 20 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | MOVEMENT   | TargetTypeValue 20 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SCENE      | TargetTypeValue 20 |
                    +------------+--------------------+
                    | SHOT       | TargetTypeValue 10 |
                    +------------+--------------------+

                        Table 35: TargetType values Values

5.1.8.1.1.3.  TagTrackUID Element

   id / type / default:  0x63C5 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TagTrackUID
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the Track(s) that the tags belong to.
   usage notes:  If the value is 0 at this level, the tags apply to all
      tracks in the Segment.  If set to any other value, it MUST match
      the TrackUID value of a track found in this Segment.

5.1.8.1.1.4.  TagEditionUID Element

   id / type / default:  0x63C9 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TagEditionUID
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the EditionEntry(s) that the tags
      belong to.
   usage notes:  If the value is 0 at this level, the tags apply to all
      editions in the Segment.  If set to any other value, it MUST match
      the EditionUID value of an edition found in this Segment.

5.1.8.1.1.5.  TagChapterUID Element

   id / type / default:  0x63C4 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TagChapterUID
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the Chapter(s) that the tags belong
      to.
   usage notes:  If the value is 0 at this level, the tags apply to all
      chapters in the Segment.  If set to any other value, it MUST match
      the ChapterUID value of a chapter found in this Segment.

5.1.8.1.1.6.  TagAttachmentUID Element

   id / type / default:  0x63C6 / uinteger / 0
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\Targets\TagAttachmentUID
   definition:  A unique ID UID to identify the Attachment(s) that the tags belong
      to.
   usage notes:  If the value is 0 at this level, the tags apply to all
      the attachments in the Segment.  If set to any other value, it
      MUST match the FileUID value of an attachment found in this
      Segment.

5.1.8.1.2.  SimpleTag Element

   id / type:  0x67C8 / master
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag
   minOccurs:  1
   recursive:  True
   definition:  Contains general information about the target.

5.1.8.1.2.1.  TagName Element

   id / type:  0x45A3 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagName
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  The name of the Tag that is going to be stored.

5.1.8.1.2.2.  TagLanguage Element

   id / type / default:  0x447A / string / und
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagLanguage
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  Specifies the language of the specified tag specified, in the
      Matroska languages form; see Section 12 on language codes.  This
      Element MUST be ignored if the TagLanguageBCP47 Element is used
      within the same SimpleTag Element.

5.1.8.1.2.3.  TagLanguageBCP47 Element

   id / type:  0x447B / string
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagLanguageBCP47
   maxOccurs:  1
   minver:  4
   definition:  The language used in the TagString, in the [BCP47] form; form defined
      in [BCP47]; see Section 12 on language codes.  If this Element is
      used, then any TagLanguage Elements used in the same SimpleTag
      MUST be ignored.

5.1.8.1.2.4.  TagDefault Element

   id / type / default:  0x4484 / uinteger / 1
   range:  0-1
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagDefault
   minOccurs / maxOccurs:  1 / 1
   definition:  A boolean value to indicate if this is the default/
      original language to use for the given tag.

5.1.8.1.2.5.  TagString Element

   id / type:  0x4487 / utf-8
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagString
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  The value of the Tag.

5.1.8.1.2.6.  TagBinary Element

   id / type:  0x4485 / binary
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagBinary
   maxOccurs:  1
   definition:  The values of the Tag, Tag if it is binary.  Note that this
      cannot be used in the same SimpleTag as TagString.

6.  Matroska Element Ordering

   Except for

   With the exceptions of the EBML Header and the CRC-32 Element, the
   EBML specification [RFC8794] does not require any particular storage
   order for Elements.  This  However, this specification however defines mandates and
   recommendations for ordering certain Elements in order to facilitate better
   playback, seeking, and editing efficiency.  This section describes
   and offers rationale for ordering requirements and recommendations
   for Matroska.

6.1.  Top-Level Elements

   The Info Element is the only REQUIRED Top-Level Element in a Matroska
   file.  To be playable, Matroska MUST also contain at least one Tracks
   Element and Cluster Element.  The first Info Element and the first
   Tracks Element MUST either MUST be stored before the first Cluster Element
   or both SHALL both be referenced by a SeekHead Element occurring before
   the first Cluster Element.

   All Top-Level Elements MUST use a 4-octet long EBML Element ID.

   When using Medium Linking, chapters are used to reference other
   Segments to play in a given order (see Section 17.2. 17.2).  A Segment
   containing these linked Linked Chapters does not require a Track Element or
   a Cluster Element.

   It is possible to edit a Matroska file after it has been created.
   For example, chapters, tags, or attachments can be added.  When new
   Top-Level Elements are added to a Matroska file, the SeekHead
   Element(s) MUST be updated so that the SeekHead Element(s) itemize itemizes
   the identity and position of all Top-Level Elements.

   Editing, removing, or adding Elements to a Matroska file often
   requires that some existing Elements be voided or extended.
   Transforming the existing Elements into Void Elements as padding can
   be used as a method to avoid moving large amounts of data around.

6.2.  CRC-32

   As noted by the EBML specification, specification [RFC8794], if a CRC-32 Element is
   used, then the CRC-32 Element MUST be the first ordered Element
   within its Parent Element.

   In Matroska Matroska, all Top-Level Elements of an EBML Document SHOULD
   include a CRC-32 Element as their first Child Element.  The Segment
   Element, which is the Root Element, SHOULD NOT have a CRC-32 Element.

6.3.  SeekHead

   If used, the first SeekHead Element MUST be the first non-CRC-32
   Child Element of the Segment Element.  If a second SeekHead Element
   is used, then the first SeekHead Element MUST reference the identity
   and position of the second SeekHead. SeekHead Element.

   Additionally, the second SeekHead Element MUST only reference Cluster
   Elements and not any other Top-Level Element already contained within
   the first SeekHead Element.

   The second SeekHead Element MAY be stored in any order relative to
   the other Top-Level Elements.  Whether one or two SeekHead Element(s) Elements
   are used, the SeekHead Element(s) MUST collectively reference the
   identity and position of all Top-Level Elements except for the first
   SeekHead Element.

6.4.  Cues (index) (Index)

   The Cues Element is RECOMMENDED to optimize seeking access in
   Matroska.  It is programmatically simpler to add the Cues Element
   after all Cluster Elements have been written because this does not
   require a prediction of how much space to reserve before writing the
   Cluster Elements.  However, storing the Cues Element before the
   Cluster Elements can provide some seeking advantages.  If the Cues
   Element is present, then it SHOULD either be stored before the first
   Cluster Element or be referenced by a SeekHead Element.

6.5.  Info

   The first Info Element SHOULD occur before the first Tracks Element
   and first Cluster Element except when referenced by a SeekHead
   Element.

6.6.  Chapters Element

   The Chapters Element SHOULD be placed before the Cluster Element(s).
   The Chapters Element can be used during playback even if the user
   does not need to seek.  It immediately gives the user information
   about what section is being read and what other sections are
   available.  In the case of Ordered Chapters Chapters, it is RECOMMENDED to
   evaluate the logical linking even before playing.  The Chapters Element
   SHOULD be placed before the first Tracks Element and after the first
   Info Element.

6.7.  Attachments

   The Attachments Element is not intended to be used by default when
   playing the file, file but could contain information relevant to the
   content, such as cover art or fonts.  Cover art is useful even before
   the file is played played, and fonts could be needed before playback starts
   for the initialization of subtitles.  The Attachments Element MAY be
   placed before the first Cluster Element; however, if the Attachments
   Element is likely to be edited, then it SHOULD be placed after the
   last Cluster Element.

6.8.  Tags

   The Tags Element is most subject to changes after the file was
   originally created.  For easier editing, the Tags Element can be
   placed at the end of the Segment Element, even after the Attachments
   Element.  On the other hand, it is inconvenient to have to seek in
   the Segment for tags, especially for network streams.  So streams; thus, it's
   better if the Tags Element is found early in the stream.  When
   editing the Tags Element, the original Tags Element at the beginning
   can be overwritten with a Void Element and a new Tags Element written
   at the end of the Segment Element.  The file and Segment sizes will
   only marginally change.

7.  Matroska versioning Versioning

   Matroska is based upon on the principle that a reading application does
   not have to support 100% of the specifications in order to be able to
   play the file.  A  Therefore, a Matroska file therefore contains version
   indicators that tell a reading application what to expect.

   It is possible and valid to have the version fields indicate that the
   file contains Matroska Elements from a higher specification version
   number while signaling that a reading application MUST only support a
   lower version number properly in order to play it back (possibly with
   a reduced feature set).

   The EBML Header of each Matroska document informs the reading
   application on what version of Matroska to expect.  The Elements
   within the EBML Header with jurisdiction over this information are
   DocTypeVersion and DocTypeReadVersion.

   DocTypeVersion MUST be equal to or greater than the highest Matroska
   version number of any Element present in the Matroska file.  For
   example, a file using the SimpleBlock Element (Section 5.1.3.4) MUST
   have a DocTypeVersion equal to or greater than 2.  A file containing
   CueRelativePosition Elements (Section 5.1.5.1.2.3) MUST have a
   DocTypeVersion equal to or greater than 4.

   The DocTypeReadVersion MUST contain the minimum version number that a
   reading application can minimally support in order to play the file
   back -- optionally with a reduced feature set.  For example, if a
   file contains only Elements of version 2 or lower except for
   CueRelativePosition (which is a version 4 Matroska Element), then
   DocTypeReadVersion SHOULD still be set to 2 and not 4 because
   evaluating CueRelativePosition is not necessary for standard playback
   -- it makes seeking more precise if used.

   A reading application supporting Matroska version V MUST NOT refuse
   to read a file with DocReadTypeVersion equal to or lower than V V, even
   if DocTypeVersion is greater than V.

   A reading application supporting at least Matroska version V and
   reading a file whose DocTypeReadVersion field is equal to or lower
   than V MUST skip Matroska/EBML Elements it encounters but does not
   know about if that unknown element fits into the size constraints set
   by the current Parent Element.

8.  Stream Copy

   It is sometimes necessary to create a Matroska file from another
   Matroska file, for example example, to add subtitles in a language or to edit
   out a portion of the content.  Some values from the original Matroska
   file need to be kept the same in the destination file.  For example,
   the SamplingFrequency of an audio track wouldn't change between the
   two files.  Some other values may change between the two files, for
   example
   example, the TrackNumber of an audio track when another track has
   been added.

   An Element is marked with a property: stream copy: True when the
   values of that Element need to be kept identical between the source
   and destination file. files.  If that property is not set, elements may or
   may not keep the same value between the source and destination. destination files.

9.  DefaultDecodedFieldDuration

   The DefaultDecodedFieldDuration Element can signal to the displaying
   application how often fields of a video sequence will be available
   for displaying.  It can be used for both interlaced and progressive
   content.

   If the video sequence is signaled as interlaced Section 5.1.4.1.28.1,
   (Section 5.1.4.1.28.1), then DefaultDecodedFieldDuration equals the
   period between two successive fields at the output of the decoding
   process.  For video sequences signaled as progressive,
   DefaultDecodedFieldDuration is half of the period between two
   successive frames at the output of the decoding process.

   These values are valid at the end of the decoding process before
   post-processing (such as deinterlacing or inverse telecine) is
   applied.

   Examples:

   *  Blu-ray movie: 1000000000 ns/(48/1.001) = 20854167 ns

   *  PAL broadcast/DVD: 1000000000 ns/(50/1.000) = 20000000 ns

   *  N/ATSC broadcast: 1000000000 ns/(60/1.001) = 16683333 ns

   *  hard-telecined  Hard-telecined DVD: 1000000000 ns/(60/1.001) = 16683333 ns (60
      encoded interlaced fields per second)

   *  soft-telecined  Soft-telecined DVD: 1000000000 ns/(60/1.001) = 16683333 ns (48
      encoded interlaced fields per second, with "repeat_first_field =
      1")

10.  Cluster Blocks

   Frames using references SHOULD be stored in "coding order".  That
   means order" (i.e., the
   references first, first and then the frames referencing them. them).  A
   consequence is that timestamps might not be consecutive.  But  However, a
   frame with a past timestamp MUST reference a frame already known, otherwise
   it's known;
   otherwise, it is considered bad/void.

   Matroska has two similar ways to store frames in a block:

   *  in a Block which that is contained inside a BlockGroup, BlockGroup

   *  or  in a SimpleBlock which that is directly in the Cluster. Cluster

   The SimpleBlock is usually preferred unless some extra elements of
   the BlockGroup need to be used.  A Matroska Reader MUST support both
   types of blocks.

   Each block contains the same parts in the following order:

   *  a variable length header, variable-length header

   *  optionally  the lacing information, information (optional)

   *  the consecutive frame(s)

   The block header starts with the number of the Track it corresponds
   to.  The value MUST corresponding correspond to the TrackNumber (Section 5.1.4.1.1)
   of a TrackEntry of the Segment.

   The TrackNumber is coded using the VINT Variable-Size Integer (VINT)
   mechanism described in Section 4 of [RFC8794].  To save space, the
   shortest VINT form SHOULD be used.  The value can be coded on up to 8
   octets.  This is the only element with a variable size in the block
   header.

   The timestamp is expressed in Track Ticks; see Section 11.1.  The
   value is stored as a signed value on 16 bits.

10.1.  Block Structure

   This section describes the binary data contained in the Block Element
   Section 5.1.3.5.1.
   (Section 5.1.3.5.1).  Bit 0 is the most significant bit.

   As the TrackNumber size can vary between 1 and 8 octets, there are 8
   different sizes for the Block header.  We only provide the  The definitions for
   TrackNumber sizes of 1 and 2.  The 2 are provided; the other variants can be
   deduced by extending the size of the TrackNumber by multiples of 8
   bits.

    0                   1                   2                   3
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |               |                               |       |I|LAC|U|
   |  Track Number |         Timestamp             | Rsvrd |N|ING|N|
   |               |                               |       |V|   |U|
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

              Figure 11: Block Header with 1 octet 1-Octet TrackNumber

    0                   1                   2                   3
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |          Track Number         |         Timestamp             |
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |       |I|LAC|U|
   | Rsvrd |N|ING|N|                     ...
   |       |V|   |U|
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

              Figure 12: Block Header with 2 octets 2-Octet TrackNumber

   where:

   Track Number:  8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48 48, or 64 bits
      an bits.  An EBML VINT coded VINT-coded
      track number number.

   Timestamp:  16 bits
      signed bits.  Signed timestamp in Track Ticks Ticks.

   Rsvrd:  4 bits bits.  Reserved bits MUST be set to 0 0.

   INV:  1 bit
      Invisible, the bit.  Invisible.  The codec SHOULD decode this frame but not
      display it it.

   LACING:  2 bits
      using bits.  Uses lacing mode

      *  00b : mode.

      00b:  no lacing (Section 10.3.1)
      *  01b :
      01b:  Xiph lacing (Section 10.3.2)
      *  11b :
      11b:  EBML lacing (Section 10.3.3)
      *  10b :
      10b:  fixed-size lacing (Section 10.3.4)

   UNU:  1 bit
      unused bit bit.  Unused bit.

   The following data in the Block correspond corresponds to the lacing data and
   frames usage as described in each respective lacing mode.

10.2.  SimpleBlock Structure

   This section describes the binary data contained in the SimpleBlock
   Element Section 5.1.3.4. (Section 5.1.3.4).  Bit 0 is the most significant bit.

   The SimpleBlock structure is inspired by the Block structure; see
   Section 10.1.  The main differences are the added Keyframe flag and
   Discardable flag.  Otherwise, everything is the same.

   As the TrackNumber size can vary between 1 and 8 octets, there are 8
   different sizes for the SimpleBlock header.  We only provide the  The definitions for
   TrackNumber sizes of 1 and 2.  The 2 are provided; the other variants can be
   deduced by extending the size of the TrackNumber by multiples of 8
   bits.

    0                   1                   2                   3
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |               |                               |K|     |I|LAC|D|
   |  Track Number |         Timestamp             |E|Rsvrd|N|ING|I|
   |               |                               |Y|     |V|   |S|
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

           Figure 13: SimpleBlock Header with 1 octet 1-Octet TrackNumber

    0                   1                   2                   3
    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |          Track Number         |         Timestamp             |
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |K|     |I|LAC|D|
   |E|Rsvrd|N|ING|I|                     ...
   |Y|     |V|   |S|
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

           Figure 14: SimpleBlock Header with 2 octets 2-Octet TrackNumber

   where:

   Track Number:  8, 16, 24, 32, 40, 48 48, or 64 bits
      an bits.  An EBML VINT coded VINT-coded
      track number number.

   Timestamp:  16 bits
      signed bits.  Signed timestamp in Track Ticks Ticks.

   KEY:  1 bit
      Keyframe, set bit.  Keyframe.  Set when the Block contains only keyframes keyframes.

   Rsvrd:  3 bits bits.  Reserved bits MUST be set to 0 0.

   INV:  1 bit
      Invisible, the bit.  Invisible.  The codec SHOULD decode this frame but not
      display it it.

   LACING:  2 bits
      using bits.  Uses lacing mode

      *  00b : mode.

      00b:  no lacing (Section 10.3.1)
      *  01b :
      01b:  Xiph lacing (Section 10.3.2)
      *  11b :
      11b:  EBML lacing (Section 10.3.3)
      *  10b :
      10b:  fixed-size lacing (Section 10.3.4)

   DIS:  1 bit
      Discardable, the bit.  Discardable.  The frames of the Block can be discarded
      during playing if needed needed.

   The following data in the SimpleBlock correspond corresponds to the lacing data
   and frames usage as described in each respective lacing mode.

10.3.  Block Lacing

   Lacing is a mechanism to save space when storing data.  It is
   typically used for small blocks of data (referred to as frames in
   Matroska).  It packs multiple frames into a single Block or
   SimpleBlock.

   Lacing MUST NOT be used to store a single frame in a Block or
   SimpleBlock.

   There are 3 three types of lacing:

   1.

   *  Xiph, which is inspired by what is found in the Ogg container
      [RFC3533]
   2.

   *  EBML, which is the same with sizes coded differently
   3.  fixed-size,

   *  Fixed-size, where the size is not coded

   When lacing is not used, i.e. i.e., to store a single frame, the lacing bits 5
   and 6 of the Block or SimpleBlock MUST be set to zero. 0.

   For example, a user wants to store 3 three frames of the same track.
   The first frame is 800 octets long, the second is 500 octets long long,
   and the third is 1000 octets long.  As  Because these data frames are small,
   they can be stored in a lace to save space.

   It is possible not to not use lacing at all and just store a single frame
   without any extra data.  When the FlagLacing -- Section 5.1.4.1.12 -- (Section 5.1.4.1.12) is
   set to "0" 0, all blocks of that track MUST NOT use lacing.

10.3.1.  No lacing Lacing

   When no lacing is used, the number of frames in the lace is ommitted ommitted,
   and only one frame can be stored in the Block.  The bits 5-6  Bits 5 and 6 of the
   Block Header flags are set to 0b00.

   The Block for an 800 octets 800-octet frame is as follows:

              +==============+=========+===================+

               +=============+=========+===================+
               | Block Octets Octet | Value   | Description       |
              +==============+=========+===================+
               +=============+=========+===================+
               | 4-803       | <frame> | Single frame data |
              +--------------+---------+-------------------+
               +-------------+---------+-------------------+

                            Table 36: No lacing Lacing

   When a Block contains a single frame, it MUST use this No lacing "no lacing"
   mode.

10.3.2.  Xiph lacing Lacing

   The Xiph lacing uses the same coding of size as found in the Ogg
   container [RFC3533].  The bits 5-6  Bits 5 and 6 of the Block Header flags are set
   to 0b01.

   The Block data with laced frames is stored as follows:

   *  Lacing Head on 1 Octet: octet: Number of frames in the lace minus 1.

   *  Lacing size of each frame except the last one.

   *  Binary data of each frame consecutively.

   The lacing size is split into 255 values, stored as unsigned octets
   -- for example, 500 is coded 255;245 or [0xFF 0xF5].  A frame with a
   size multiple of 255 is coded with a 0 at the end of the size -- for
   example, 765 is coded 255;255;255;0 or [0xFF 0xFF 0xFF 0x00].

   The size of the last frame is deduced from the size remaining in the
   Block after the other frames.

   Because large sizes result in large coding of the sizes, it is
   RECOMMENDED to use Xiph lacing only with small frames.

   In our example, the 800, 500 800-, 500-, and 1000 1000-octet frames are stored with
   Xiph lacing in a Block as follows:

     +=============+=====================+==========================+

     +==============+=====================+==========================+
     | Block Octet Octets | Value               | Description              |
     +=============+=====================+==========================+
     +==============+=====================+==========================+
     | 4            | 0x02                | Number of frames minus 1 |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     | 5-8          | 0xFF 0xFF 0xFF 0x23 | Size of the first frame  |
     |              |                     | (255;255;255;35)         |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     | 9-10         | 0xFF 0xF5           | Size of the second frame |
     |              |                     | (255;245)                |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     | 11-810       |                     | First frame data         |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     | 811-1310     |                     | Second frame data        |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     | 1311-2310    |                     | Third frame data         |
     +-------------+---------------------+--------------------------+
     +--------------+---------------------+--------------------------+

                       Table 37: Xiph lacing example Lacing Example

   The Block is 2311 octets large octets, and the last frame starts at 1311, so we
   can deduce that the size of the last frame is 2311 - 1311 = 1000.

10.3.3.  EBML lacing Lacing

   The EBML lacing encodes the frame size with an EBML-like encoding
   [RFC8794].  The bits 5-6  Bits 5 and 6 of the Block Header flags are set to 0b11.

   The Block data with laced frames is stored as follows:

   *  Lacing Head on 1 Octet: Number of frames in the lace minus 1.

   *  Lacing size of each frame except the last one.

   *  Binary data of each frame consecutively.

   The first frame size is encoded as an EBML Variable-Size Integer
   value, also known as VINT in [RFC8794]. value.  The remaining
   frame sizes are encoded as signed values using the difference between
   the frame size and the previous frame size.  These signed values are
   encoded as VINT, with a mapping from signed to unsigned numbers.
   Decoding the unsigned number stored in the VINT to a signed number is
   done by subtracting 2^((7*n)-1)-1, where n is the octet size of the
   VINT.

       +===================================+======================+
       | Bit Representation of signed Signed VINT | Possible Value Range |
       +===================================+======================+
       | 1xxx xxxx                         | 2^7 values from      |
       |                                   | -(2^6-1) to 2^6      |
       +-----------------------------------+----------------------+
       | 01xx xxxx xxxx xxxx               | 2^14 values from     |
       |                                   | -(2^13-1) to 2^13    |
       +-----------------------------------+----------------------+
       | 001x xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx     | 2^21 values from     |
       |                                   | -(2^20-1) to 2^20    |
       +-----------------------------------+----------------------+
       | 0001 xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx     | 2^28 values from     |
       | xxxx xxxx                         | -(2^27-1) to 2^27    |
       +-----------------------------------+----------------------+
       | 0000 1xxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx     | 2^35 values from     |
       | xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx               | -(2^34-1) to 2^34    |
       +-----------------------------------+----------------------+

               Table 38: EBML Lacing signed Signed VINT bits usage Bits Usage

   In our example, the 800, 500 800-, 500- and 1000 1000-octet frames are stored with
   EBML lacing in a Block as follows:

    +==============+===========+=====================================+
    | Block Octets | Value     | Description                         |
    +==============+===========+=====================================+
    | 4            | 0x02      | Number of frames minus 1            |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
    | 5-6          | 0x43 0x20 | Size of the first frame (800 =      |
    |              |           | 0x320 + 0x4000)                     |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
    | 7-8          | 0x5E 0xD3 | Size of the second frame (500 - 800 |
    |              |           | = -300 = - 0x12C + 0x1FFF + 0x4000) |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
    | 8-807        | <frame1>  | First frame data                    |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
    | 808-1307     | <frame2>  | Second frame data                   |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+
    | 1308-2307    | <frame3>  | Third frame data                    |
    +--------------+-----------+-------------------------------------+

                      Table 39: EBML lacing example Lacing Example

   The Block is 2308 octets large octets, and the last frame starts at 1308, so we
   can deduce that the size of the last frame is 2308 - 1308 = 1000.

10.3.4.  Fixed-size lacing

   The Lacing

   Fixed-size lacing doesn't store the frame size, size; rather, it only
   stores the number of frames in the lace.  Each frame MUST have the
   same size.  The frame size of each frame is deduced from the total
   size of the Block.
   The bits 5-6  Bits 5 and 6 of the Block Header flags are set to
   0b10.

   The Block data with laced frames is stored as follows:

   *  Lacing Head on 1 Octet: Number of frames in the lace minus 1.

   *  Binary data of each frame consecutively.

   For example, for 3 three frames of that are 800 octets each:

          +==============+==========+==========================+
          | Block Octets | Value    | Description              |
          +==============+==========+==========================+
          | 4            | 0x02     | Number of frames minus 1 |
          +--------------+----------+--------------------------+
          | 5-804        | <frame1> | First frame data         |
          +--------------+----------+--------------------------+
          | 805-1604     | <frame2> | Second frame data        |
          +--------------+----------+--------------------------+
          | 1605-2404    | <frame3> | Third frame data         |
          +--------------+----------+--------------------------+

                   Table 40: Fixed-size lacing example Fixed-Size Lacing Example

   This gives a Block of 2405 octets.  When reading the Block Block, we find
   that there are 3 three frames (Octet 4).  The data start at Octet 5, so
   the size of each frame is (2405 - 5) / 3 = 800.

10.3.5.  Laced Frames Timestamp

   A Block only contains a single timestamp value.  But when lacing is
   used, it contains more than one frame.  Each frame originally has its
   own timestamp, or Presentation Timestamp (PTS).  That timestamp
   applies to the first frame in the lace.

   In the lace, each frame after the first one has an underdetermined
   timestamp.  But  However, each of these frames MUST be contiguous -- i.e. i.e.,
   the decoded data MUST NOT contain any gap between them.  If there is
   a gap in the stream, the frames around the gap MUST NOT be in the
   same Block.

   Lacing is only useful for small contiguous data to save space.  This
   is usually the case for audio tracks and not the case for video --
   which
   (which use a lot of data -- data) or subtitle tracks -- which (which have long
   gaps. gaps).
   For audio, there is usually a fixed output sampling frequency for the
   whole track.  So track, so the decoder should be able to recover the timestamp
   of each sample, knowing each output sample is contiguous with a fixed
   frequency.  For subtitles subtitles, this is usually not the case case, so lacing
   SHOULD NOT be used.

10.4.  Random Access Points

   Random Access Points (RAP) (RAPs) are positions where the parser can seek
   to and start playback without decoding of what was before.  In Matroska Matroska,
   BlockGroups and SimpleBlocks can be RAPs.  To seek to these elements elements,
   it is still necessary to seek to the Cluster containing them, read
   the Cluster Timestamp Timestamp, and start playback from the BlockGroup or
   SimpleBlock that is a RAP.

   Because a Matroska File is usually composed of multiple tracks
   playing at the same time -- video, audio audio, and subtitles -- to seek
   properly to a RAP, each selected track must be taken in account.
   Usually
   Usually, all audio and subtitle BlockGroup BlockGroups or SimpleBlock SimpleBlocks are RAP. RAPs.
   They are independent of each other and can be played randomly.

   Video tracks on

   On the other hand hand, video tracks often use references to previous and
   future frames for better coding efficiency.  Frames with such
   reference
   references MUST either contain one or more ReferenceBlock Elements in
   their BlockGroup or MUST be marked as non-keyframe in a SimpleBlock;
   see Section 10.2.

   *

   BlockGroup with a frame that references another frame, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- References a Block 40 Track Ticks before this one -->
       <ReferenceBlock>-40</ReferenceBlock>
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   *

   SimpleBlock with a frame that references another frame, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <SimpleBlock/> (octet 3 bit 0 not set)
     ...
   </Cluster>

   Frames that are RAP -- i.e. they RAPs (i.e., frames that don't depend on other frames -- frames)
   MUST set the keyframe flag if they are in a SimpleBlock or their
   parent BlockGroup MUST NOT contain a ReferenceBlock.

   *

   BlockGroup with a frame that references no other frame, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- No ReferenceBlock allowed in this BlockGroup -->
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   *

   SimpleBlock with a frame that references no other frame, with the
   EBML tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <SimpleBlock/> (octet 3 bit 0 set)
     ...
   </Cluster>

   There may be cases where the use of BlockGroup is necessary, as the
   frame may need a BlockDuration, BlockAdditions, CodecState CodecState, or a
   DiscardPadding element.  For thoses cases cases, a SimpleBlock MUST NOT be
   used,
   used; the reference information SHOULD be recovered for non-RAP
   frames.

   *

   SimpleBlock with a frame that references another frame, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <SimpleBlock/> (octet 3 bit 0 not set)
     ...
   </Cluster>

   *

   Same frame that references another frame put inside a BlockGroup to
   add BlockDuration, with the EBML tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- ReferenceBlock value recovered based on the codec -->
       <ReferenceBlock>-40</ReferenceBlock>
       <BlockDuration>20<BlockDuration>
       <BlockDuration>20</BlockDuration>
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   When a frame in a BlockGroup is not a RAP, the BlockGroup MUST
   contain at least a ReferenceBlock.  The ReferenceBlocks MUST be used
   in one of the following ways:

   *  each reference frame listed as a ReferenceBlock,

   *  some referenced frame frames listed as a ReferenceBlock, even if the
      timestamp value is accurate,
   * or

   *  one ReferenceBlock with the timestamp value "0" corresponding to a
      self or unknown reference.

   The lack of ReferenceBlock would mean such a frame is a RAP RAP, and
   seeking on that frame that actually depends on other frames may
   create a bogus output or even crash.

   *

   Same frame that references another frame put inside a BlockGroup BlockGroup, but
   the reference could not be recovered, with the EBML tree shown as
   XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- ReferenceBlock value not recovered from the codec -->
       <ReferenceBlock>0</ReferenceBlock>
       <BlockDuration>20<BlockDuration>
       <BlockDuration>20</BlockDuration>
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   *

   BlockGroup with a frame that references two other frames, with the
   EBML tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- References a Block 80 Track Ticks before this one -->
       <ReferenceBlock>-80</ReferenceBlock>
       <!-- References a Block 40 Track Ticks after this one -->
       <ReferenceBlock>40</ReferenceBlock>
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   Intra-only video frames, such as the ones found in AV1 or VP9, can be
   decoded without any other frame, but they don't reset the codec
   state.  So  Thus, seeking to these frames is not possible possible, as the next
   frames may need frames that are not known from this seeking point.
   Such intra-only frames MUST NOT be considered as keyframes keyframes, so the
   keyframe flag MUST NOT be set in the SimpleBlock or a ReferenceBlock
   MUST be used to signify the frame is not a RAP.  The timestamp value
   of the ReferenceBlock MUST be "0", meaning it's referencing itself.

   *

   Intra-only frame not an RAP, with the EBML tree shown as XML:

   <Cluster>
     <Timestamp>123456</Timestamp>
     <BlockGroup>
       <!-- References itself to mark it should not be used as RAP -->
       <ReferenceBlock>0</ReferenceBlock>
       <Block/>
     </BlockGroup>
     ...
   </Cluster>

   Because a video SimpleBlock has less references information on references than a
   video BlockGroup, it is possible to remux a video track using
   BlockGroup into a SimpleBlock, as long as it doesn't use any other
   BlockGroup features than ReferenceBlock.

11.  Timestamps

   Historically

   Historically, timestamps in Matroska were mistakenly called
   timecodes.  The Timestamp Element was called Timecode, the
   TimestampScale Element was called TimecodeScale, the
   TrackTimestampScale Element was called
   TrackTimecodeScale TrackTimecodeScale, and the
   ReferenceTimestamp Element was called ReferenceTimeCode.

11.1.  Timestamp Ticks

   All timestamp values in Matroska are expressed in multiples of a
   tick.  They are usually stored as integers.  There are three types of
   ticks possible: Matroska Ticks, Segment Ticks, and Track Ticks.

11.1.1.  Matroska Ticks

   For such elements, the timestamp value is stored directly in
   nanoseconds.

   The elements storing values in Matroska Ticks/nanoseconds are:

   *  TrackEntry\DefaultDuration; defined in Section 5.1.4.1.13

   *  TrackEntry\DefaultDecodedFieldDuration; defined in
      Section 5.1.4.1.14

   *  TrackEntry\SeekPreRoll; defined in Section 5.1.4.1.26

   *  TrackEntry\CodecDelay; defined in Section 5.1.4.1.25

   *  BlockGroup\DiscardPadding; defined in Section 5.1.3.5.7

   *  ChapterAtom\ChapterTimeStart; defined in Section 5.1.7.1.4.3

   *  ChapterAtom\ChapterTimeEnd; defined in Section 5.1.7.1.4.4

   *  CuePoint\CueTime; defined in Section 5.1.5.1.1

   *  CueReference\CueRefTime; defined in Section 5.1.5.1.1

11.1.2.  Segment Ticks

   Elements in Segment Ticks involve the use of the TimestampScale
   Element of the Segment to get the timestamp in nanoseconds of the
   element, with the following formula:

   timestamp in nanosecond = element value * TimestampScale

   This allows storing for storage of smaller integer values in the elements.

   When using the default value of TimestampScale of "1,000,000", "1,000,000" for TimestampScale, one
   Segment Tick represents one millisecond.

   The elements storing values in Segment Ticks are:

   *  Cluster\Timestamp; defined in Section 5.1.3.1

   *  Info\Duration is stored as a floating-point floating-point, but the same formula
      applies; defined in Section 5.1.2.10

   *  CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueDuration; defined in
      Section 5.1.5.1.2.4

11.1.3.  Track Ticks

   Elements in Track Ticks involve the use of the TimestampScale Element
   of the Segment and the TrackTimestampScale Element of the Track to
   get the timestamp in nanoseconds of the element, with the following
   formula:

   timestamp in nanoseconds =
       element value * TrackTimestampScale * TimestampScale

   This allows storing for storage of smaller integer values in the elements.
   The resulting floating-point values of the timestamps are still
   expressed in nanoseconds.

   When using the default values for TimestampScale and
   TrackTimestampScale of "1,000,000" for TimestampScale and of
   "1.0" respectively, for TrackTimestampScale, one Track Tick represents one
   millisecond.

   The elements storing values in Track Ticks are:

   *  Cluster\BlockGroup\Block and Cluster\SimpleBlock timestamps;
      detailed in Section 11.2

   *  Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockDuration; defined in Section 5.1.3.5.3

   *  Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceBlock; defined in Section 5.1.3.5.5

   When the TrackTimestampScale is interpreted as "1.0", Track Ticks are
   equivalent to Segment Ticks and give an integer value in nanoseconds.
   This is the most common case as TrackTimestampScale is usually
   omitted.

   A value of TrackTimestampScale other than "1.0" MAY be used to scale
   the timestamps more in tune with each Track sampling frequency.  For
   historical reasons, a lot of Matroska readers Readers don't take the
   TrackTimestampScale value in into account.  So  Thus, using a value other
   than "1.0" might not work in many places.

11.2.  Block Timestamps

   A Block Element and SimpleBlock Element timestamp is the time when
   the decoded data of the first frame in the Block/SimpleBlock MUST be
   presented,
   presented if the track of that Block/SimpleBlock is selected for
   playback.  This is also known as the Presentation Timestamp (PTS).

   The Block Element and SimpleBlock Element store their timestamps as
   signed integers, relative to the Cluster\Timestamp value of the
   Cluster they are stored in.  To get the timestamp of a Block or
   SimpleBlock in nanoseconds you have to use nanoseconds, the following formula: formula is used:

   ( Cluster\Timestamp + ( block timestamp * TrackTimestampScale ) ) *
   TimestampScale

   The Block Element and SimpleBlock Element store their timestamps as
   16bit
   16-bit signed integers, allowing a range from "-32768" to "+32767"
   Track Ticks.  Although these values can be negative, when added to
   the Cluster\Timestamp, the resulting frame timestamp SHOULD NOT be
   negative.

   When a CodecDelay Element is set, its value MUST be substracted from
   each Block timestamp of that track.  To get the timestamp in
   nanoseconds of the first frame in a Block or SimpleBlock, the formula
   becomes:

   ( ( Cluster\Timestamp + ( block timestamp * TrackTimestampScale ) ) *
     TimestampScale ) - CodecDelay

   The resulting frame timestamp SHOULD NOT be negative.

   During playback, when a frame has a negative timestamp, the content
   MUST be decoded by the decoder but not played to the user.

11.3.  TimestampScale Rounding

   The default Track Tick duration is one millisecond.

   The TimestampScale is a floating-point value, which value that is usually 1.0. "1.0".
   But when it's not, the multiplied Block Timestamp is a floating-point
   value in nanoseconds.  The Matroska Reader SHOULD use the nearest
   rounding value in nanosecond nanoseconds to get the proper nanosecond timestamp
   of a Block.  This allows some clever TimestampScale values to have a
   more refined timestamp precision per frame.

12.  Language Codes

   Matroska from version versions 1 through 3 uses use language codes that can be either
   the 3 letters three-letter bibliographic ISO-639-2 ISO 639-2 form [ISO639-2] (like "fre"
   for French), French) or such a language code followed by a dash and a country
   code for specialities in languages (like "fre-ca" for Canadian
   French).  The ISO 639-2 Language Elements are "Language Element",
   "TagLanguage Element", and "ChapLanguage Element".

   Starting in Matroska version 4, either [ISO639-2] or [BCP47] MAY be
   used, although BCP 47 is RECOMMENDED.  The BCP 47 Language Elements
   are "LanguageBCP47 Element", "TagLanguageBCP47 Element", and
   "ChapLanguageBCP47 Element".  If a BCP 47 Language Element and an ISO
   639-2 Language Element are used within the same Parent Element, then
   the ISO 639-2 Language Element MUST be ignored and precedence given
   to the BCP 47 Language Element.

13.  Country Codes

   Country codes are the [BCP47] two-letter region subtag, subtags, without the
   UK exception.

14.  Encryption

   This Matroska specification provides no interoperable solution for
   securing the data container with any assurances of confidentiality,
   integrity, authenticity, or to provide authorization.  The
   ContentEncryption Element (Section 5.1.4.1.31.8) and associated sub-
   fields (Section 5.1.4.1.31.9 to Section 5.1.4.1.31.12) are defined
   only for the benefit of implementers to construct their own
   proprietary solution or as the basis for further standardization
   activities.  How to use these fields to secure a Matroska data
   container is out of scope, as are any related issues such as key
   management and distribution.

   A Matroska Reader who encounters containers that use the fields
   defined in this section MUST rely on out-of-scope guidance to decode
   the associated content.

   Because encryption occurs within the Block Element, it is possible to
   manipulate encrypted streams without decrypting them.  The streams
   could potentially be copied, deleted, cut, appended, or any number of
   other possible editing techniques without decryption.  The data can
   be used without having to expose it or go through the decrypting
   process.

   Encryption can also be layered within Matroska.  This means that two
   completely different types of encryption can be used, requiring two
   separate keys to be able to decrypt a stream.

   Encryption information is stored in the ContentEncodings Element
   under the ContentEncryption Element.

   For encryption systems sharing public/private keys, the creation of
   the keys and the exchange of keys are not covered by this document.
   They have to be handled by the system using Matroska.

   The algorithms described in Table 26 support different modes of
   operations and key sizes.  The specification of these parameters is
   required for a complete solution, solution but is out of scope of this document
   and left to the proprietary implementations using them or subsequent
   profiles of this document.

   The ContentEncodingScope Element gives an idea of which part of the
   track are encrypted.  But is encrypted, but each ContentEncAlgo Element and its sub sub-
   elements like AESSettingsCipherMode really (like AESSettingsCipherMode) define exactly how the
   encrypted track should be exactly interpreted.

   An example of an extension that builds upon these security-related
   fields in this specification is [WebM-Enc].  It uses AES-CTR,
   ContentEncAlgo = 5 (Section 5.1.4.1.31.9) 5.1.4.1.31.9), and AESSettingsCipherMode
   = 1 (Section 5.1.4.1.31.12).

   A Matroska Writer MUST NOT use insecure cryptographic algorithms to
   create new archives or streams, but a Matroska Reader MAY support
   these algorithms to read previously made archives or stream. streams.

15.  Image Presentation

15.1.  Cropping

   The PixelCrop Elements (PixelCropTop, PixelCropBottom,
   PixelCropRight, and PixelCropLeft) indicate when, and by how much,
   encoded videos video frames SHOULD be cropped for display.  These Elements
   allow edges of the frame that are not intended for display, such display (such as
   the sprockets of a full-frame film scan or the VANC area of a
   digitized analog videotape, videotape) to be stored but hidden.  PixelCropTop
   and PixelCropBottom store an integer of how many rows of pixels
   SHOULD be cropped from the top and bottom of the image
   (respectively). image, respectively.
   PixelCropLeft and PixelCropRight store an integer of how many columns
   of pixels SHOULD be cropped from the left and right of the image (respectively). image,
   respectively.

   For example, a pillar-boxed video that stores a 1440x1080 visual
   image within the center of a padded 1920x1080 encoded image may set
   both PixelCropLeft and PixelCropRight to "240", so that a Matroska Player
   should crop off 240 columns of pixels from the left and right of the
   encoded image to present the image with the pillar-boxes hidden.

   Cropping has to be performed before resizing and the display
   dimensions given by DisplayWidth, DisplayHeight DisplayHeight, and DisplayUnit
   apply to the already cropped already-cropped image.

15.2.  Rotation

   The ProjectionPoseRoll Element (see Section (Section 5.1.4.1.28.46) can be used to
   indicate that the image from the associated video track SHOULD be
   rotated for presentation.  For instance, the following
   representation example of the
   Projection Element Section (Section 5.1.4.1.28.41) and the ProjectionPoseRoll
   Element represents a video track where the image SHOULD be presented
   with a 90-degree counter-clockwise rotation, with the EBML tree shown
   as XML : XML:

   <Projection>
     <ProjectionPoseRoll>90</ProjectionPoseRoll>
   </Projection>

                        Figure 15: Rotation example. Example

16.  Segment Position

   The Segment Position of an Element refers to the position of the
   first octet of the Element ID of that Element, measured in octets,
   from the beginning of the Element Data section of the containing
   Segment Element.  In other words, the Segment Position of an Element
   is the distance in octets from the beginning of its containing
   Segment Element minus the size of the Element ID and Element Data
   Size of that Segment Element.  The Segment Position of the first
   Child Element of the Segment Element is 0.  An Element which that is not
   stored within a Segment Element, such as the Elements of the EBML
   Header, do not have a Segment Position.

16.1.  Segment Position Exception

   Elements that are defined to store a Segment Position MAY define
   reserved values to indicate a special meaning.

16.2.  Example of Segment Position

   This table presents an example of Segment Position by showing a
   hexadecimal representation of a very small Matroska file with labels
   to show the offsets in octets.  The file contains a Segment Element
   with an Element ID of "0x18538067" and a MuxingApp Element with an
   Element ID of "0x4D80".

      0                             1                             2
      0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  0  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  0
      +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+
    0 |1A|45|DF|A3|8B|42|82|88|6D|61|74|72|6F|73|6B|61|
      ^ EBML Header
    0 |                                               |18|53|80|67|
                                                      ^ Segment ID
   20 |93|
      ^ Segment Data Size
   20 |  |15|49|A9|66|8E|4D|80|84|69|65|74|66|57|41|84|69|65|74|66|
         ^ Start of Segment data
   20 |                 |4D|80|84|69|65|74|66|57|41|84|69|65|74|66|
                        ^ MuxingApp start

   In the above example, the Element ID of the Segment Element is stored
   at offset 16, the Element Data Size of the Segment Element is stored
   at offset 20, and the Element Data of the Segment Element is stored
   at offset 21.

   The MuxingApp Element is stored at offset 26.  Since the Segment
   Position of an Element is calculated by subtracting the position of
   the Element Data of the containing Segment Element from the position
   of that Element, the Segment Position of the MuxingApp Element in the
   above example is '26 "26 - 21' 21" or '5'. "5".

17.  Linked Segments

   Matroska provides several methods to link two or more Segment
   Elements together to create a Linked Segment.  A Linked Segment is a
   set of multiple Segments linked together into a single presentation
   by using Hard Linking or Medium Linking.

   All Segments within a Linked Segment MUST have a SegmentUUID.

   All Segments within a Linked Segment SHOULD be stored within the same
   directory or be accessible quickly accessible based on their SegmentUUID in
   order to have a seamless transition between segments.

   All Segments within a Linked Segment MAY set a SegmentFamily with a
   common value to make it easier for a Matroska Player to know which
   Segments are meant to be played together.

   The SegmentFilename, PrevFilename PrevFilename, and NextFilename elements MAY also
   give hints on the original filenames that were used when the Segment
   links were created, in case some SegmentUUID SegmentUUIDs are damaged.

17.1.  Hard Linking

   Hard Linking, also called splitting, "splitting", is the process of creating a
   Linked Segment by linking multiple Segment Elements using the
   NextUUID and PrevUUID Elements.

   All Segments within a Hard Linked Segment MUST use the same Tracks
   list and TimestampScale.

   Within a Linked Segment, the timestamps of Block and SimpleBlock MUST
   follow
   consecutively follow the timestamps of Block and SimpleBlock from the
   previous Segment in linking order.

   With Hard Linking, the chapters of any Segment within the Linked
   Segment MUST only reference the current Segment.  The NextUUID and
   PrevUUID reference the respective SegmentUUID values of the next and
   previous Segments.

   The first Segment of a Linked Segment MUST NOT have a PrevUUID
   Element.  The last Segment of a Linked Segment MUST NOT have a
   NextUUID Element.

   For each node of the chain of Segments of a Linked Segment Segment, at least
   one Segment MUST reference the other Segment within the chain.

   In a chain of Segments of a Linked Segment Segment, the NextUUID always takes
   precedence over the PrevUUID.  So  Thus, if SegmentA has a NextUUID to
   SegmentB and SegmentB has a PrevUUID to SegmentC, the link to use is
   NextUUID between SegmentA and SegmentB, and SegmentC is not part of
   the Linked Segment.

   If SegmentB has a PrevUUID to SegmentA SegmentA, but SegmentA has no NextUUID,
   then the Matroska Player MAY consider these two Segments linked as
   SegmentA followed by SegmentB.

   As an example, three Segments can be Hard Linked as a Linked Segment
   through cross-referencing each other with SegmentUUID, PrevUUID, and
   NextUUID,
   NextUUID as shown in this table:

    +==========+================+==================+==================+
    |file name |SegmentUUID     | PrevUUID         | NextUUID         |
    +==========+================+==================+==================+
    |start.mkv |71000c23cd310998| Invalid          | a77b3598941cb803 |
    |          |53fbc94dd984a5dd|                  | eac0fcdafe44fac9 |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
    |middle.mkv|a77b3598941cb803| 71000c23cd310998 | 6c92285fa6d3e827 |
    |          |eac0fcdafe44fac9| 53fbc94dd984a5dd | b198d120ea3ac674 |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
    |end.mkv   |6c92285fa6d3e827| a77b3598941cb803 | Invalid          |
    |          |b198d120ea3ac674| eac0fcdafe44fac9 |                  |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+

                     Table 41: Usual Hard Linking UIDs

   An other example where only the NextUUID Element is used:

      +============+==================+==========+==================+
      | file name  | SegmentUUID      | PrevUUID | NextUUID         |
      +============+==================+==========+==================+
      | start.mkv  | 71000c23cd310998 | Invalid  | a77b3598941cb803 |
      |            | 53fbc94dd984a5dd |          | eac0fcdafe44fac9 |
      +------------+------------------+----------+------------------+
      | middle.mkv | a77b3598941cb803 | n/a      | 6c92285fa6d3e827 |
      |            | eac0fcdafe44fac9 |          | b198d120ea3ac674 |
      +------------+------------------+----------+------------------+
      | end.mkv    | 6c92285fa6d3e827 | n/a      | Invalid          |
      |            | b198d120ea3ac674 |          |                  |
      +------------+------------------+----------+------------------+

                  Table 42: Hard Linking without PrevUUID

   An example where only the PrevUUID Element is used:

      +============+==================+==================+==========+
      | file name  | SegmentUUID      | PrevUUID         | NextUUID |
      +============+==================+==================+==========+
      | start.mkv  | 71000c23cd310998 | Invalid          | n/a      |
      |            | 53fbc94dd984a5dd |                  |          |
      +------------+------------------+------------------+----------+
      | middle.mkv | a77b3598941cb803 | 71000c23cd310998 | n/a      |
      |            | eac0fcdafe44fac9 | 53fbc94dd984a5dd |          |
      +------------+------------------+------------------+----------+
      | end.mkv    | 6c92285fa6d3e827 | a77b3598941cb803 | Invalid  |
      |            | b198d120ea3ac674 | eac0fcdafe44fac9 |          |
      +------------+------------------+------------------+----------+

                  Table 43: Hard Linking without NextUUID
   In this

   An example where only the middle.mkv is using the PrevUUID and
   NextUUID Elements:

    +==========+================+==================+==================+
    |file name |SegmentUUID     | PrevUUID         | NextUUID         |
    +==========+================+==================+==================+
    |start.mkv |71000c23cd310998| Invalid          | n/a              |
    |          |53fbc94dd984a5dd|                  |                  |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
    |middle.mkv|a77b3598941cb803| 71000c23cd310998 | 6c92285fa6d3e827 |
    |          |eac0fcdafe44fac9| 53fbc94dd984a5dd | b198d120ea3ac674 |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+
    |end.mkv   |6c92285fa6d3e827| n/a              | Invalid          |
    |          |b198d120ea3ac674|                  |                  |
    +----------+----------------+------------------+------------------+

                Table 44: Hard Linking with mixed Mixed UID links Links

17.2.  Medium Linking

   Medium Linking creates relationships between Segments using Ordered
   Chapters (Section 20.1.3) and the ChapterSegmentUUID Element.  A
   Chapter Edition with Ordered Chapters MAY contain Chapter elements
   that reference timestamp ranges from other Segments.  The Segment
   referenced by the Ordered Chapter via the ChapterSegmentUUID Element
   SHOULD be played as part of a Linked Segment.

   The timestamps of Segment content referenced by Ordered Chapters MUST
   be adjusted according to the cumulative duration of the previous
   Ordered Chapters.

   As an example example, a file named intro.mkv could have a SegmentUUID of
   "0xb16a58609fc7e60653a60c984fc11ead".  Another file called
   program.mkv could use a Chapter Edition that contains two Ordered
   Chapters.  The first chapter references the Segment of intro.mkv with
   the use of a ChapterSegmentUUID, ChapterSegmentEditionUID,
   ChapterTimeStart, and optionally a an optional ChapterTimeEnd element.  The second
   chapter references content within the Segment of program.mkv.  A
   Matroska Player SHOULD recognize the Linked Segment created by the
   use of ChapterSegmentUUID in an enabled Edition and present the
   reference content of the two Segments as a single presentation.

   The ChapterSegmentUUID represents the Segment that holds the content
   to play in place of the Linked Chapter.  The ChapterSegmentUUID MUST
   NOT be the SegmentUUID of its own Segment.

   There are 2 two ways to use a chapter link:

   *  Linked-Duration linking, linking

   *  Linked-Edition linking

17.2.1.  Linked-Duration

   A Matroska Player MUST play the content of the linked Segment from
   the ChapterTimeStart until the ChapterTimeEnd timestamp in place of
   the Linked Chapter.

   ChapterTimeStart and ChapterTimeEnd represent timestamps in the
   Linked Segment matching the value of ChapterSegmentUUID.  Their
   values MUST be in the range of the linked Segment duration.

   The ChapterTimeEnd value MUST be set when using linked-duration Linked-Duration
   chapter linking.  ChapterSegmentEditionUID MUST NOT be set.

17.2.2.  Linked-Edition

   A Matroska Player MUST play the whole linked Linked Edition of the linked
   Segment in place of the Linked Chapter.

   ChapterSegmentEditionUID represents a valid Edition from the Linked
   Segment matching the value of ChapterSegmentUUID.

   When using linked-edition Linked-Edition chapter linking. linking, ChapterTimeEnd is
   OPTIONAL.

18.  Track Flags

18.1.  Default flag Flag

   The "default track" Default flag is a hint for a Matroska Player indicating that a
   given track SHOULD be eligible to be automatically selected as the
   default track for a given language.  If no tracks in a given language
   have the default track Default flag set, then all tracks in that language are
   eligible for automatic selection.  This can be used to indicate that
   a track provides "regular service" that is suitable for users with
   default settings, as opposed to specialized services, such as
   commentary, hearing-impaired captions, captions for users with hearing impairments, or
   descriptive audio.

   The Matroska Player MAY override the "default track" Default flag for any reason,
   including user preferences to prefer tracks providing accessibility
   services.

18.2.  Forced flag Flag

   The "forced" Forced flag tells the Matroska Player that it SHOULD display this
   subtitle track, even if user preferences usually would not call for
   any subtitles to be displayed alongside the current selected audio track. track that is
   currently selected.  This can be used to indicate that a track
   contains translations of onscreen text, on-screen text or of dialogue spoken in a
   different language than the track's primary one. language.

18.3.  Hearing-impaired flag  Hearing-Impaired Flag

   The "hearing impaired" Hearing-Impaired flag tells the Matroska Player that it SHOULD
   prefer this track when selecting a default track for a hearing-
   impaired user, user with a
   hearing impairment and that it MAY prefer to select a different track
   when selecting a default track for a non-hearing-impaired user. user that is not hearing-
   impaired.

18.4.  Visual-impaired flag  Visual-Impaired Flag

   The "visual impaired" Visual-Impaired flag tells the Matroska Player that it SHOULD
   prefer this track when selecting a default track for a visually-
   impaired user, user with a
   visual impairment and that it MAY prefer to select a different track
   when selecting a default track for a non-visually-impaired user. user that is not visually
   impaired.

18.5.  Descriptions flag Flag

   The "descriptions" Descriptions flag tells the Matroska Player that this track is
   suitable to play via a text-to-speech system for a visually-impaired
   user, user with a visual
   impairment and that it SHOULD NOT automatically select this track
   when selecting a default track for a non-visually-impaired user. user that is not visually
   impaired.

18.6.  Original flag Flag

   The "original" Original flag tells the Matroska Player that this track is in the
   original language, language and that it SHOULD prefer it the original language if
   configured to prefer original-language tracks of this track's type.

18.7.  Commentary flag Flag

   The "commentary" Commentary flag tells the Matroska Player that this track
   contains commentary on the content.

18.8.  Track Operation

   TrackOperation allows combining for the combination of multiple tracks to make
   a virtual one.  It uses two separate system to combine tracks.  One
   to create a 3D "composition" (left/right/background planes) and one
   to simplify join two tracks together to make a single track.

   A track created with TrackOperation is a proper track with a UID and
   all its flags.  However, the codec ID is meaningless because each
   "sub" track needs to be decoded by its own decoder before the
   "operation" is applied.  The Cues Elements corresponding to such a
   virtual track SHOULD be the union of the Cues Elements for each of
   the tracks it's composed of (when the Cues are defined per track).

   In the case of TrackJoinBlocks, the Block Elements (from BlockGroup
   and SimpleBlock) of all the tracks SHOULD be used as if they were
   defined for this new virtual Track.  When two Block Elements have
   overlapping start or end timestamps, it's up to the underlying system
   to either drop some of these frames or render them the way they
   overlap.  This situation SHOULD be avoided when creating such tracks tracks,
   as you can never be sure of the end result on different platforms.

18.9.  Overlay Track

   Overlay tracks SHOULD be rendered in the same channel as the track
   it's linked to.  When content is found in such a track, it SHOULD be
   played on the rendering channel instead of the original track.

18.10.  Multi-planar and 3D videos Videos

   There are two different ways to compress 3D videos: have each eye
   track in a separate track and have one track have both eyes combined
   inside (which is more efficient, efficient compression-wise).  Matroska supports
   both ways.

   For the single track single-track variant, there is the StereoMode Element, which
   defines how planes are assembled in the track (mono or left-right
   combined).  Odd values of StereoMode means the left plane comes first
   for more convenient reading.  The pixel count of the track
   (PixelWidth/PixelHeight) is the raw amount number of pixels, for example pixels (for example,
   3840x1080 for full HD side by side, side), and the DisplayWidth/
   DisplayHeight in pixels is the amount number of pixels for one plane
   (1920x1080 for that full HD stream).  Old stereo 3D were displayed
   using anaglyph (cyan and red colors separated).  For compatibility
   with such movies, there is a value of the StereoMode that corresponds
   to AnaGlyph.

   There is also a "packed" mode (values 13 and 14) which that consists of
   packing two frames together in a Block using that uses lacing.  The first
   frame is the left eye and the other frame is the right eye (or vice
   versa).  The frames SHOULD be decoded in that order and are possibly
   dependent on each other (P and B frames).

   For separate tracks, Matroska needs to define exactly which track
   does what.  TrackOperation with TrackCombinePlanes do does that.  For
   more
   details look at details, see Section 18.8 on how TrackOperation works.

   The 3D support is still in infancy and may evolve to support more
   features.

   The StereoMode used to be part of Matroska v2 v2, but it didn't meet the
   requirement for multiple tracks.  There was also a bug in libmatroska
   prior to 0.9.0 that would save/read it as 0x53B9 instead of 0x53B8;
   see OldStereoMode (Section 5.1.4.1.28.5).  Matroska Readers MAY
   support these legacy files by checking Matroska v2 or 0x53B9.  The
   older values of StereoMode were 0: mono, 1: right eye, 2: left eye,
   3: both eyes, 0 (mono), 1 (right eye), 2 (left
   eye), and 3 (both eyes); these are the only values that can be found
   in OldStereoMode.  They are not compatible with the StereoMode values
   found in Matroska v3 and above.

19.  Default track selection Track Selection

   This section provides some example sets of Tracks and hypothetical
   user settings, along with indications of which ones a similarly- similarly
   configured Matroska Player SHOULD automatically select for playback
   by default in such a situation.  A player MAY provide additional
   settings with more detailed controls for more nuanced scenarios.
   These examples are provided as guidelines to illustrate the intended
   usages of the various supported Track flags, flags and their expected
   behaviors.

   Track names are shown in English for illustrative purposes; actual
   files may have titles in the language of each track, track or provide titles
   in multiple languages.

19.1.  Audio Selection

   Example track set:

   +===+=====+====+======+========+=======+===============+===========+
   |No.|Type |Lang|Layout|Original|Default|Other flags Flags    |Name       |
   +===+=====+====+======+========+=======+===============+===========+
   |1  |Video|und |N/A   |N/A     |N/A    |None           |           |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |2  |Audio|eng |5.1   |1       |1      |None           |           |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |3  |Audio|eng |2.0   |1       |1      |None           |           |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |4  |Audio|eng |2.0   |1       |0      |Visual-impaired|Descriptive|      |Visual-Impaired|Descriptive|
   |   |     |    |      |        |       |               |audio      |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |5  |Audio|esp |5.1   |0       |1      |None           |           |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |6  |Audio|esp |2.0   |0       |0      |Visual-impaired|Descriptive|      |Visual-Impaired|Descriptive|
   |   |     |    |      |        |       |               |audio      |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |7  |Audio|eng |2.0   |1       |0      |Commentary     |Director's |
   |   |     |    |      |        |       |               |Commentary |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+
   |8  |Audio|eng |2.0   |1       |0      |None           |Karaoke    |
   +---+-----+----+------+--------+-------+---------------+-----------+

               Table 45: Audio Tracks for default selection

   Here we have Default Selection

   The table above shows a file with 7 seven audio tracks, of which 5 are tracks -- five in
   English and 2 are two in Spanish.

   The English tracks all have the Original flag, indicating that
   English is the original content language.

   Generally

   Generally, the player will first consider the track languages: if languages.  If
   the player has an option to prefer original-language audio and the
   user has enabled it, then it should prefer one of the Original-flagged
   tracks. tracks with the
   Original flag.  If configured to specifically prefer audio tracks in
   English or Spanish, the player should select one of the tracks in the
   corresponding language.  The player may also wish to prefer an
   Original-flagged a track
   with the Original flag if no tracks matching any of the user's
   explicitly-preferred
   explicitly preferred languages are available.

   Two of the tracks have the Visual-impaired Visual-Impaired flag.  If the player has
   been configured to prefer such tracks, it should select one;
   otherwise, it should avoid them if possible.

   If selecting an English track, when other settings have left multiple
   possible options, it may be useful to exclude the tracks that lack
   the Default flag: here, flag.  Here, one provides descriptive service for the
   visually impaired
   individuals with visual impairments (which has its own flag and may
   be automatically selected by user configuration, configuration but is unsuitable for
   users with default-configured players), one is a commentary track
   (which has its own flag, which flag and the player may or may not have
   specialized handling for), and the last contains karaoke versions of
   the music that plays during the film, which film (which is an unusual specialized
   audio service that Matroska has no built-in support for indicating,
   so it's indicated in the track name instead. instead).  By not setting the
   Default flag on these specialized tracks, the file's author hints
   that they should not be automatically selected by a default-configured default-
   configured player.

   Having narrowed its choices down, our the example player now may have to
   select between tracks 2 and 3.  The only difference between these
   tracks is their channel layouts: 2 is 5.1 surround, while 3 is
   stereo.  If the player is aware that the output device is a pair of
   headphones or stereo speakers, it may wish to prefer the stereo mix
   automatically.  On the other hand, if it knows that the device is a
   surround system, it may wish to prefer the surround mix.

   If the player finishes analyzing all of the available audio tracks
   and finds that multiple seems more than one seem equally and maximally preferable,
   it SHOULD default to the first of the group.

19.2.  Subtitle selection Selection

   Example track set:

   +===+===========+====+========+=======+======+==========+==========+
   |No.| Type      |Lang|Original|Default|Forced| Other

   +===+=========+====+========+=======+======+========+==============+
   |No.|Type     |Lang|Original|Default|Forced|Other   | Name         |
   |   |         |    |        |       |      | flags      |flags   |              |
   +===+===========+====+========+=======+======+==========+==========+
   +===+=========+====+========+=======+======+========+==============+
   |1  | Video  |Video    |und |N/A     |N/A    |N/A   | None   |None    |              |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |2  | Audio  |Audio    |fra |1       |1      |N/A   | None   |None    |              |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |3  | Audio  |Audio    |por |0       |1      |N/A   | None   |None    |              |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |4  | Subtitles |fra  |Subtitles|fra |1       |1      |0     | None     |None    |              |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |5  | Subtitles |fra  |Subtitles|fra |1       |0      |0     | Hearing- |     |Hearing-| Captions for |
   |   |         |    |        |       |      | impaired | for the      |Impaired| users with   |
   |   |         |    |        |       |      |        | hearing- hearing      |
   |   |         |    |        |       |      |        | impaired impairments  |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |6  | Subtitles |por  |Subtitles|por |0       |1      |0     | None     |None    |              |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |7  | Subtitles |por  |Subtitles|por |0       |0      |1     | None     |None    | Signs        |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+
   |8  | Subtitles |por  |Subtitles|por |0       |0      |0     | Hearing- |     |Hearing-| SDH          |
   |   |         |    |        |       |      |Impaired|              | impaired |          |
   +---+-----------+----+--------+-------+------+----------+----------+
   +---+---------+----+--------+-------+------+--------+--------------+

             Table 46: Subtitle Tracks for default selection

   Here we have 2 Default Selection

   The table above shows two audio tracks and 5 five subtitle tracks.  As
   we can see, French is the original language.

   We'll start by discussing the case where the user prefers French (or
   Original-language)
   original-language) audio (or has explicitly selected the French audio
   track),
   track) and also prefers French subtitles.

   In this case, if the player isn't configured to display captions when
   the audio matches their preferred subtitle languages, the player
   doesn't need to select a subtitle track at all.

   If the user _has_ indicated that they want captions to be displayed,
   the selection simply comes down to whether Hearing-impaired hearing-impaired subtitles
   are preferred.

   The situation for a user who prefers Portuguese subtitles starts out
   somewhat analogous.  If they select the original French audio (either
   by explicit audio language preference, preference for Original- original-
   language tracks, or by explicitly selecting that track), then the
   selection once again comes down to the hearing-impaired preference.

   However, the case where the Portuguese audio track is selected has an
   important catch: a Forced track in Portuguese is present.  This may
   contain translations of onscreen on-screen text from the video track, track or of
   portions of the audio that are not translated (music, for instance).
   This means that even if the user's preferences wouldn't normally call
   for captions here, the Forced track should be selected nonetheless,
   rather than selecting no track at all.  On the other hand, if the
   user's preferences _do_ call for captions, the non-Forced tracks
   should be preferred, as the Forced track will not contain captioning
   for the dialogue.

20.  Chapters

   The Matroska Chapters system can have multiple Editions Editions, and each
   Edition can consist of Simple Chapters where a chapter start time is
   used as a marker in the timeline only.  An Edition can be more
   complex with Ordered Chapters where a chapter end time stamp timestamp is
   additionally used or much more complex with Linked Chapters.  The
   Matroska Chapters system can also have a menu structure, structure borrowed from
   the DVD
   menu DVD-menu system [DVD-Video], [DVD-Video] or have its own built-in Matroska
   menu structure.

20.1.  EditionEntry

   The EditionEntry is also called an Edition.  An Edition contains a
   set of Edition flags and MUST contain at least one ChapterAtom
   Element.  Chapters are always inside an Edition (or a Chapter itself
   is part of an Edition).  Multiple Editions are allowed.  Some of
   these Editions MAY be ordered and others not.

20.1.1.  EditionFlagDefault

   Only one Edition SHOULD have an EditionFlagDefault flag set to true.

20.1.2.  Default Edition

   The Default Edition is the Edition that a Matroska Player SHOULD use
   for playback by default.

   The first Edition with the EditionFlagDefault flag set to true is the
   Default Edition.

   When all EditionFlagDefault flags are set to false, then the first
   Edition is the Default Edition.

               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition   | FlagDefault | Default Edition |
               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition 1 | true        | X               |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 2 | true        |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 3 | true        |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+

                   Table 47: Default edition, all default Edition, All Default

               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition   | FlagDefault | Default Edition |
               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition 1 | false       | X               |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 2 | false       |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 3 | false       |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+

                   Table 48: Default edition, no default Edition, No Default

               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition   | FlagDefault | Default Edition |
               +===========+=============+=================+
               | Edition 1 | false       |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 2 | true        | X               |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+
               | Edition 3 | false       |                 |
               +-----------+-------------+-----------------+

                  Table 49: Default edition, with default Edition, With Default

20.1.3.  EditionFlagOrdered

   The EditionFlagOrdered Flag flag is a significant feature feature, as it enables
   an Edition of Ordered Chapters which that defines and arranges a virtual
   timeline rather than simply labeling points within the timeline.  For
   example, with Editions of Ordered Chapters Chapters, a single Matroska file
   can present multiple edits of a film without duplicating content.
   Alternatively, if a videotape is digitized in full, one Ordered
   Edition could present the full content (including colorbars,
   countdown, slate, a feature presentation, and black frames), while
   another Edition of Ordered Chapters can use Chapters that only mark
   the intended presentation with the colorbars and other ancillary
   visual information excluded.  If an Edition of Ordered Chapters is
   enabled, then the Matroska Player MUST play those Chapters in their
   stored order from the timestamp marked in the ChapterTimeStart
   Element to the timestamp marked in to ChapterTimeEnd Element.

   If the EditionFlagOrdered Flag flag evaluates to "0", Simple Chapters are
   used and only the ChapterTimeStart of a Chapter is used as a chapter
   mark to jump to the predefined point in the timeline.  With Simple
   Chapters, a Matroska Player MUST ignore certain Chapter Elements.  In
   that case case, these elements are informational only.

   The following list shows the different Chapter elements only found in
   Ordered Chapters.

                 +======================================+
                 | Ordered Chapter elements             |
                 +======================================+
                 |

   *  ChapterAtom/ChapterSegmentUUID       |
                 +--------------------------------------+
                 |

   *  ChapterAtom/ChapterSegmentEditionUID |
                 +--------------------------------------+
                 |

   *  ChapterAtom/ChapterTrack             |
                 +--------------------------------------+
                 |

   *  ChapterAtom/ChapProcess              |
                 +--------------------------------------+
                 |

   *  Info/ChapterTranslate                |
                 +--------------------------------------+
                 |

   *  TrackEntry/TrackTranslate            |
                 +--------------------------------------+

                     Table 50: elements only found in
                             ordered chapters

   Furthermore, there are other EBML Elements which that could be used if the
   EditionFlagOrdered evaluates to "1".

20.1.3.1.  Ordered-Edition and Matroska Segment-Linking

   * Segment Linking

   Hard Linking: Ordered-Chapters supersedes  Ordered Chapters supersede the Hard Linking.

   *

   Medium Linking:  Ordered Chapters are used in a normal way and can be
      combined with the ChapterSegmentUUID element element, which establishes a
      link to another Segment.

   See Section 17 on the Linked Segments for more information about Hard
   Linking and Medium Linking.

20.2.  ChapterAtom

   The ChapterAtom is also called a Chapter.

20.2.1.  ChapterTimeStart

   The

   ChapterTimeStart is the timestamp of the start of Chapter with
   nanosecond accuracy, accuracy and is not scaled by TimestampScale.  For Simple Chapters
   Chapters, this is the position of the chapter markers in the
   timeline.

20.2.2.  ChapterTimeEnd

   The

   ChapterTimeEnd is the timestamp of the end of Chapter with nanosecond accuracy,
   accuracy and is not scaled by TimestampScale.  The timestamp defined
   by the ChapterTimeEnd is not part of the Chapter.  A Matroska Player
   calculates the duration of this Chapter using the difference between
   the ChapterTimeEnd and ChapterTimeStart.  The end timestamp MUST be
   greater than or equal to the start timestamp.

   When the ChapterTimeEnd timestamp is equal to the ChapterTimeStart
   timestamp, the timestamps timestamp is included in the Chapter.  It can be
   useful to put markers in a file or add chapter commands with ordered
   chapter commands without having to play anything; see
   Section 5.1.7.1.4.14.

      +===========+=================+===============+===============+
      | Chapter   | Start timestamp | End timestamp | Duration      |
      +===========+=================+===============+===============+
      | Chapter 1 | 0               | 1000000000    | 1000000000    |
      +-----------+-----------------+---------------+---------------+
      | Chapter 2 | 1000000000      | 5000000000    | 4000000000    |
      +-----------+-----------------+---------------+---------------+
      | Chapter 3 | 6000000000      | 6000000000    | 0             |
      +-----------+-----------------+---------------+---------------+
      | Chapter 4 | 9000000000      | 8000000000    | Invalid       |
      |           |                 |               | (-1000000000) |
      +-----------+-----------------+---------------+---------------+

                Table 51: 50: ChapterTimeEnd usage possibilities Usage Possibilities

20.2.3.  Nested Chapters

   A ChapterAtom element can contain other ChapterAtom elements.  That
   element is a Parent Chapter Chapter, and the ChapterAtom elements it contains
   are Nested Chapters.

   Nested Chapters can be useful to tag small parts of a Segment that
   already have tags or add Chapter Codec commands on smaller parts of a
   Segment that already have Chapter Codec commands.

   The ChapterTimeStart of a Nested Chapter MUST be greater than or
   equal to the ChapterTimeStart of its Parent Chapter.

   If the Parent Chapter of a Nested Chapter has a ChapterTimeEnd, the
   ChapterTimeStart of that Nested Chapter MUST be smaller than or equal
   to the ChapterTimeEnd of the Parent Chapter.

20.2.4.  Nested Chapters in Ordered Chapters

   The ChapterTimeEnd of the lowest level of Nested Chapters MUST be set
   for Ordered Chapters.

   When used with Ordered Chapters, the ChapterTimeEnd value of a Parent
   Chapter is useless for playback playback, as the proper playback sections are
   described in its Nested Chapters.  The ChapterTimeEnd SHOULD NOT be
   set in Parent Chapters and MUST be ignored for playback.

20.2.5.  ChapterFlagHidden

   Each Chapter ChapterFlagHidden flag works independently of parent
   chapters. Parent
   Chapters.  A Nested Chapter with a ChapterFlagHidden flag that
   evaluates to "0" remains visible in the user interface even if the
   Parent Chapter ChapterFlagHidden flag is set to "1".

        +==========================+===================+=========+
        | Chapter + Nested Chapter | ChapterFlagHidden | visible |
        +==========================+===================+=========+
        | Chapter 1                | 0                 | yes     |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+
        | Nested Chapter 1.1       | 0                 | yes     |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+
        | Nested Chapter 1.2       | 1                 | no      |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+
        | Chapter 2                | 1                 | no      |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+
        | Nested Chapter 2.1       | 0                 | yes     |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+
        | Nested Chapter 2.2       | 1                 | no      |
        +--------------------------+-------------------+---------+

              Table 52: 51: ChapterFlagHidden nested visibility Nested Visibility

20.3.  Menu features Features

   The menu features are handled like a chapter codec.  That means each
   codec has a type, some private data data, and some data in the chapters.

   The type of the menu system is defined by the ChapProcessCodecID
   parameter.  For now, only 2 two values are supported : supported: 0 matroska script, (Matroska
   Script) and 1 menu (menu borrowed from the DVD [DVD-Video]. [DVD-Video]).  The private
   data depend on the type of menu system (stored in
   ChapProcessPrivate), idem for the data in the chapters (stored in
   ChapProcessData).

   The menu system, as well as Chapter Codecs in general, can do perform
   actions on the Matroska Player like Player, such as jumping to another Chapter or
   Edition, selecting different tracks tracks, and possibly more.  The scope of
   all the possibilities of Chapter Codecs is not covered in this document
   document, as it depends on the Chapter Codec features and its
   integration in a Matroska Player.

20.4.  Physical Types

   Each level can have different meanings for audio and video.  The
   ORIGINAL_MEDIA_TYPE tag [MatroskaTags] can be used to specify a
   string for ChapterPhysicalEquiv = 60.  Here is the list of possible
   levels for both audio and video:

   +=======+=======================+=============+=====================+
   | Value | Audio                 | Video       | Comment             |
   +=======+=======================+=============+=====================+
   | 70    | SET / PACKAGE         | SET /       | the collection of   |
   |       |                       | PACKAGE     | different media     |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 60    | CD / 12" / 10" / 7" / | DVD / VHS   | the physical medium |
   |       | TAPE / MINIDISC / DAT | /           | like a CD or a DVD  |
   |       |                       | LASERDISC   |                     |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 50    | SIDE                  | SIDE        | when the original   |
   |       |                       |             | medium (LP/DVD) has |
   |       |                       |             | different sides     |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 40    | -                     | LAYER       | another physical    |
   |       |                       |             | level on DVDs       |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 30    | SESSION               | SESSION     | as found on CDs and |
   |       |                       |             | DVDs                |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 20    | TRACK                 | -           | as found on audio   |
   |       |                       |             | CDs                 |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+
   | 10    | INDEX                 | -           | the first logical   |
   |       |                       |             | level of the side/  |
   |       |                       |             | medium              |
   +-------+-----------------------+-------------+---------------------+

           Table 53: 52: ChapterPhysicalEquiv meaning Meaning per track type Track Type

20.5.  Chapter Examples

20.5.1.  Example 1 : basic chaptering 1: Basic Chaptering

   In this example example, a movie is split in different chapters.  It could
   also just be an audio file (album) on in which each track corresponds to
   a chapter.

   *  00000 ms - 05000 ms : ms: Intro
   *  05000 ms - 25000 ms : ms: Before the crime
   *  25000 ms - 27500 ms : ms: The crime
   *  27500 ms - 38000 ms : ms: The killer arrested
   *  38000 ms - 43000 ms : ms: Credits

   This would translate in the following matroska Matroska form, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML : XML:

   <Chapters>
     <EditionEntry>
       <EditionUID>16603393396715046047</EditionUID>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>1193046</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>0</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>5000000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Intro</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>2311527</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>5000000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>25000000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Before the crime</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Avant le crime</ChapString>
           <ChapLanguage>fra</ChapLanguage>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>3430008</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>25000000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>27500000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>The crime</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Le crime</ChapString>
           <ChapLanguage>fra</ChapLanguage>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>4548489</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>27500000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>38000000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>After the crime</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Apres le crime</ChapString>
           <ChapLanguage>fra</ChapLanguage>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>5666960</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>38000000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>43000000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Credits</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Generique</ChapString>
           <ChapLanguage>fra</ChapLanguage>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
     </EditionEntry>
   </Chapters>

                     Figure 16: Basic Chapters Example. Example

20.5.2.  Example 2 : nested chapters 2: Nested Chapters

   In this example example, an (existing) album is split into different
   chapters, and one of them contains another splitting.

20.5.2.1.  The Micronauts "Bleep To Bleep"

   *  00:00 - 12:28 : 12:28: Baby Wants To wants to Bleep/Rock
      -  00:00 - 04:38 : 04:38: Baby wants to bleep (pt.1)
      -  04:38 - 07:12 : 07:12: Baby wants to rock
      -  07:12 - 10:33 : 10:33: Baby wants to bleep (pt.2)
      -  10:33 - 12:28 : 12:28: Baby wants to bleep (pt.3)
   *  12:30 - 19:38 : 19:38: Bleeper_O+2
   *  19:40 - 22:20 : 22:20: Baby wants to bleep (pt.4)
   *  22:22 - 25:18 : 25:18: Bleep to bleep
   *  25:20 - 33:35 : 33:35: Baby wants to bleep (k)
   *  33:37 - 44:28 : 44:28: Bleeper

   This would translate in the following matroska Matroska form, with the EBML
   tree shown as XML : XML:

   <Chapters>
     <EditionEntry>
       <EditionUID>1281690858003401414</EditionUID>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>1</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>0</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>748000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Baby wants to Bleep/Rock</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
         <ChapterAtom>
           <ChapterUID>2</ChapterUID>
           <ChapterTimeStart>0</ChapterTimeStart>
           <ChapterTimeEnd>278000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
           <ChapterDisplay>
             <ChapString>Baby wants to bleep (pt.1)</ChapString>
           </ChapterDisplay>
         </ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterAtom>
           <ChapterUID>3</ChapterUID>
           <ChapterTimeStart>278000000</ChapterTimeStart>
           <ChapterTimeEnd>432000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
           <ChapterDisplay>
             <ChapString>Baby wants to rock</ChapString>
           </ChapterDisplay>
         </ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterAtom>
           <ChapterUID>4</ChapterUID>
           <ChapterTimeStart>432000000</ChapterTimeStart>
           <ChapterTimeEnd>633000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
           <ChapterDisplay>
             <ChapString>Baby wants to bleep (pt.2)</ChapString>
           </ChapterDisplay>
         </ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterAtom>
           <ChapterUID>5</ChapterUID>
           <ChapterTimeStart>633000000</ChapterTimeStart>
           <ChapterTimeEnd>748000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
           <ChapterDisplay>
             <ChapString>Baby wants to bleep (pt.3)</ChapString>
           </ChapterDisplay>
         </ChapterAtom>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>6</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>750000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>1178500000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Bleeper_O+2</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>7</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>1180500000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>1340000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Baby wants to bleep (pt.4)</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>8</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>1342000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>1518000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Bleep to bleep</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>9</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>1520000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>2015000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Baby wants to bleep (k)</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
       <ChapterAtom>
         <ChapterUID>10</ChapterUID>
         <ChapterTimeStart>2017000000</ChapterTimeStart>
         <ChapterTimeEnd>2668000000</ChapterTimeEnd>
         <ChapterDisplay>
           <ChapString>Bleeper</ChapString>
         </ChapterDisplay>
       </ChapterAtom>
     </EditionEntry>
   </Chapters>

                     Figure 17: Nested Chapters Example. Example

21.  Attachments

   Matroska supports storage of related files and data in the
   Attachments Element (a Top-Level Element).  Attachment Elements can
   be used to store related cover art, font files, transcripts, reports,
   error recovery files, picture, or pictures, text-based annotations, copies of
   specifications, or other ancillary files related to the Segment.

   Matroska Readers MUST NOT execute files stored as Attachment
   Elements.

21.1.  Cover Art

   This section defines a set of guidelines for the storage of cover art
   in Matroska files.  A Matroska Reader MAY use embedded cover art to
   display a representational still-image depiction of the multimedia
   contents of the Matroska file.

   Only [JPEG] and PNG [RFC2083] image formats SHOULD be used for cover
   art pictures.

   There can be two different covers for a movie/album: a portrait style
   (e.g., a DVD case) and a landscape style (e.g., a wide banner ad).

   There can be two versions of the same cover, cover: the normal cover and the
   small cover.  The dimension of the normal cover SHOULD be 600 pixels
   on the smallest side -- for example, (e.g., 960x600 for landscape, 600x800 for
   portrait, or 600x600 for square. square).  The dimension of the small cover
   SHOULD be 120 pixels on the smallest side -- for example, (e.g., 192x120 or 120x160. 120x160).

   Versions of cover art can be differentiated by the filename, which is
   stored in the FileName Element.  The default filename of the normal
   cover in square or portrait mode is cover.(jpg|png).  When stored,
   the normal cover SHOULD be the first Attachment in storage order.
   The small cover SHOULD be prefixed with "small_", such as
   small_cover.(jpg|png).  The landscape variant SHOULD be suffixed with
   "_land", such as cover_land.(jpg|png).  The filenames are case-
   sensitive.

   The following table provides examples of file names for cover art in
   Attachments.

      +======================+===================+=================+
      | FileName File Name            | Image Orientation | Pixel Length of |
      |                      |                   | Smallest Side   |
      +======================+===================+=================+
      | cover.jpg            | Portrait or       | 600             |
      |                      | square            |                 |
      +----------------------+-------------------+-----------------+
      | small_cover.png      | Portrait or       | 120             |
      |                      | square            |                 |
      +----------------------+-------------------+-----------------+
      | cover_land.png       | Landscape         | 600             |
      +----------------------+-------------------+-----------------+
      | small_cover_land.jpg | Landscape         | 120             |
      +----------------------+-------------------+-----------------+

                      Table 54: 53: Cover Art Filenames

21.2.  Font files Files

   Font files MAY be added to a Matroska file as Attachments so that the
   font file may be used to display an associated subtitle track.  This
   allows the presentation of a Matroska file to be consistent in
   various environments where the needed fonts might not be available on
   the local system.

   Depending on the font format in question, each font file can contain
   multiple font variants.  Each font variant has a name which that will be
   referred to as Font Name from now on.  This Font Name can be
   different from the Attachment's FileName, even when disregarding the
   extension.  In order to select a font for display, a Matroska player Player
   SHOULD consider both the Font Name and the base name of the
   Attachment's FileName, preferring the former when there are multiple
   matches.

   Subtitle codecs, such as SubStation Alpha (SSA/ASS), (SSA) and Advanced
   SubStation Alpha (ASS), usually refer to a font by its Font Name, not
   by its filename.  If none of the Attachments are a match for the Font
   Name, the Matroska player Player SHOULD attempt to find a system font whose
   Font Name matches the one used in the subtitle track.

   Since loading fonts temporarily can take a while, a Matroska player Player
   usually loads or installs all the fonts found in attachments so they
   are ready to be used during playback.  Failure to use the font
   attachment might result in incorrect rendering of the subtitles.

   If a selected subtitle track has some AttachmentLink elements, the
   player MAY restrict its font rendering to use only these fonts.

   A Matroska player Player SHOULD handle the official font media types from
   [RFC8081] when the system can handle the type:

   *  font/sfnt: Generic SFNT Font Type, Type

   *  font/ttf: TTF TrueType Font Type, (TTF) Font Type

   *  font/otf: OpenType Layout (OTF) Font Type, Type

   *  font/collection: Collection Font Type, Type

   *  font/woff: WOFF 1.0, 1.0

   *  font/woff2: WOFF 2.0. 2.0

   Fonts in Matroska existed long before [RFC8081].  A few unofficial
   media types for fonts were used in existing files.  Therefore, it is
   RECOMMENDED for a Matroska player Player to support the following legacy
   media types for font attachments:

   *  application/x-truetype-font: Truetype TrueType fonts, equivalent to font/
      ttf and sometimes font/otf, font/otf

   *  application/x-font-ttf: TTF TrueType fonts, equivalent to font/ttf, font/ttf

   *  application/vnd.ms-opentype: OpenType Layout fonts, equivalent to
      font/otf

   *  application/font-sfnt: Generic SFNT Font Type, equivalent to font/
      sfnt

   *  application/font-woff: WOFF 1.0, equivalent to font/woff

   There may also be some font attachments with the application/octet-
   stream media type.  In that case case, the Matroska player Player MAY try to
   guess the font type by checking the file extension of the
   AttachedFile\FileName string.  Common file extensions for fonts are:

   *  .ttf for Truetype TrueType fonts, equivalent to font/ttf, font/ttf

   *  .otf for OpenType Layout fonts, equivalent to font/otf, font/otf

   *  .ttc for Collection fonts, equivalent to font/collection

   The file extension check MUST be case-insensitive.

   Matroska writers Writers SHOULD use a valid font media type from [RFC8081] in
   the AttachedFile\FileMediaType of the font attachment.  They MAY use
   the media types found in older files when compatibility with older
   players is necessary.

22.  Cues

   The Cues Element provides an index of certain Cluster Elements to
   allow for optimized seeking to absolute timestamps within the
   Segment.  The Cues Element contains one or many CuePoint Elements
   which Elements,
   each of which MUST reference an absolute timestamp (via the CueTime
   Element), a Track (via the CueTrack Element), and a Segment Position
   (via the CueClusterPosition Element).  Additional non-mandated
   Elements are part of the CuePoint Element Element, such as CueDuration,
   CueRelativePosition, CueCodecState CueCodecState, and others which that provide any
   Matroska Reader with additional information to use in the
   optimization of seeking performance.

22.1.  Recommendations

   The following recommendations are provided to optimize Matroska
   performance.

   *  Unless Matroska is used as a live stream, it SHOULD contain a Cues
      Element.

   *  For each video track, each keyframe SHOULD be referenced by a
      CuePoint Element.

   *  It is RECOMMENDED to not reference non-keyframes of video tracks
      in Cues unless it references a Cluster Element which that contains a
      CodecState Element but no keyframes.

   *  For each subtitle track present, each subtitle frame SHOULD be
      referenced by a CuePoint Element with a CueDuration Element.

   *  References to audio tracks MAY be skipped in CuePoint Elements if
      a video track is present.  When included included, the CuePoint Elements
      SHOULD reference audio keyframes at most once every 500
      milliseconds. milliseconds at
      most.

   *  If the referenced frame is not stored within the first
      SimpleBlock, SimpleBlock
      or first BlockGroup within its Cluster Element, then the
      CueRelativePosition Element SHOULD be written to reference where
      in the Cluster the reference frame is stored.

   *  If a CuePoint Element references a Cluster Element that includes a
      CodecState Element, then that CuePoint Element MUST use a
      CueCodecState Element.

   *  CuePoint Elements SHOULD be numerically sorted in storage order by
      the value of the CueTime Element.

23.  Matroska Streaming

   In Matroska, there are two kinds of streaming: file access and
   livestreaming.

23.1.  File Access

   File access can simply be reading a file located on your computer,
   but it also includes accessing a file from an HTTP (web) server or CIFS
   Common Internet File System (CIFS) (Windows share) server.  These
   protocols are usually safe from reading errors errors, and seeking in the
   stream is possible.  However, when a file is stored far away or on a
   slow server, seeking can be an expensive operation and should be
   avoided.  The  When followed, the guidelines in Section 25, when followed, 25 help reduce the
   number of seeking operations for regular playback and also have the
   playback start quickly without a lot of data needed to read first
   (like a Cues Element, Attachment Element Element, or SeekHead Element).

   Matroska, having a small overhead, is well suited for storing music/
   videos on file servers without a big impact on the bandwidth used.
   Matroska does not require the index to be loaded before playing,
   which allows playback to start very quickly.  The index can be loaded
   only when seeking is requested the first time.

23.2.  Livestreaming

   Livestreaming is the equivalent of television broadcasting on the
   internet.
   Internet.  There are 2 two families of servers for livestreaming: RTP/
   RTSP RTP /
   Real-Time Streaming Protocol (RTSP) and HTTP.  Matroska is not meant
   to be used over RTP.  RTP already has timing and channel mechanisms
   that would be wasted if doubled in Matroska.  Additionally, having
   the same information at the RTP and Matroska level would be a source
   of confusion if they do not match.  Livestreaming of Matroska over
   file-like protocols like HTTP, QUIC, etc. etc., is possible.

   A live Matroska stream is different from a file because it usually
   has no known end (only ending when the client disconnects).  For
   this, all bits of the "size" portion of the Segment Element MUST be
   set to 1.  Another option is to concatenate Segment Elements with
   known sizes, one after the other.  This solution allows a change of
   codec/resolution between each segment.  For example, this allows for
   a switch between 4:3 and 16:9 in a television program.

   When Segment Elements are continuous, certain Elements, like Elements (like
   SeekHead, Cues, Chapters, and Attachments, Attachments) MUST NOT be used.

   It is possible for a Matroska Player to detect that a stream is not
   seekable.  If the stream has neither a SeekHead list nor a Cues list
   at the beginning of the stream, it SHOULD be considered non-seekable.
   Even though it is possible to seek forward in the stream, it is NOT
   RECOMMENDED.

   In the context of live radio or web TV, it is possible to "tag" the
   content while it is playing.  The Tags Element can be placed between
   Clusters each time it is necessary.  In that case, the new Tags
   Element MUST reset the previously encountered Tags Elements and use
   the new values instead.

24.  Tags

24.1.  Tags Precedence

   Tags allow tagging all kinds of Matroska parts with very detailed
   metadata in multiple languages.

   Some Matroska elements also contain their own string value value, like the
   Track Name (Section 5.1.4.1.18) or the Chapter String
   (Section 5.1.7.1.4.10).

   The following Matroska elements can also be defined with tags:

   *  The Track Name Element (Section 5.1.4.1.18) corresponds to a tag
      with the TagTrackUID (Section 5.1.8.1.1.3) set to the given track,
      a TagName of TITLE (Section 5.1.8.1.2.1) 5.1.8.1.2.1), and a TagLanguage
      (Section 5.1.8.1.2.2) or TagLanguageBCP47 (Section 5.1.8.1.2.3) of
      "und".

   *  The Chapter String Element (Section 5.1.7.1.4.10) corresponds to a
      tag with the TagChapterUID (Section 5.1.8.1.1.5) set to the same
      chapter UID, a TagName of TITLE (Section 5.1.8.1.2.1) 5.1.8.1.2.1), and a
      TagLanguage (Section 5.1.8.1.2.2) or TagLanguageBCP47
      (Section 5.1.8.1.2.3) matching the ChapLanguage
      (Section 5.1.7.1.4.11) or ChapLanguageBCP47
      (Section 5.1.7.1.4.12) 5.1.7.1.4.12), respectively.

   *  The FileDescription Element (Section 5.1.6.1.1) of an attachment
      corresponds to a tag with the TagAttachmentUID
      (Section 5.1.8.1.1.6) set to the given attachment, a TagName of
      TITLE (Section 5.1.8.1.2.1) 5.1.8.1.2.1), and a TagLanguage
      (Section 5.1.8.1.2.2) or TagLanguageBCP47 (Section 5.1.8.1.2.3) of
      "und".

   When both values exist in the file, the value found in Tags takes
   precedence over the value found in the original location of the
   element.  For example, if you have a TrackEntry\Name element and Tag
   TITLE for that track in a Matroska Segment, the Tag string SHOULD be
   used and
   not instead of the TrackEntry\Name string to identify the track.

   As the Tag element is optional, a lot of Matroska Readers do not
   handle it and will not use the tags value when it's found.  So  Thus, for
   maximum compatibility, it's usually better to put the strings in the
   TrackEntry, ChapterAtom ChapterAtom, and Attachment and keep the tags matching
   these values if tags are also used.

24.2.  Tag Levels

   Tag elements allow tagging information on multiple levels, with each
   level having a TargetTypeValue Section 5.1.8.1.1.1.  An element for a
   given TargetTypeValue also applies to the lower levels denoted by
   smaller TargetTypeValue values.  If an upper value doesn't apply to a
   level but the actual value to use is not known, an empty TagString
   (Section 5.1.8.1.2.5) or an empty TagBinary (Section 5.1.8.1.2.6)
   element
   MUST be used as the tag value for this level.

   See [MatroskaTags] for more details on common tag names, types types, and
   descriptions.

25.  Implementation Recommendations

25.1.  Cluster

   It is RECOMMENDED that each individual Cluster Element contains contain no
   more than 5 five seconds or 5 five megabytes of content.

25.2.  SeekHead

   It is RECOMMENDED that the first SeekHead Element be followed by a
   Void Element to allow for the SeekHead Element to be expanded to
   cover new Top-Level Elements that could be added to the Matroska
   file, such as Tags, Chapters, and Attachments Elements.

   The size of this Void Element should be adjusted depending on the
   Matroska file already having Tags, Chapters, and Attachments
   Elements.

25.3.  Optimum Layouts

   While there can be Top-Level Elements in any order, some ordering orderings of
   Elements are better than others.  Here are few  The following subsections detail
   optimum layouts for different use case: cases.

25.3.1.  Optimum layout Layout for a muxer Muxer

   This is the basic layout muxers should be using for an efficient
   playback experience. experience:

   *  SeekHead
   *  Info
   *  Tracks
   *  Chapters
   *  Attachments
   *  Tags
   *  Clusters
   *  Cues

25.3.2.  Optimum layout Layout after editing tags Editing Tags

   When tags from the previous layout need to be extended, they are
   moved to the end with the extra information.  The location where the
   old tags were located is voided.

   *  SeekHead
   *  Info
   *  Tracks
   *  Chapters
   *  Attachments
   *  Void
   *  Clusters
   *  Cues
   *  Tags

25.3.3.  Optimum layout Layout with Cues at the front Front

   Cues are usually a big chunk of data referencing a lot of locations
   in the file.  For players  Players that want to seek in the file they need to seek to
   the end of the file to access these locations.  It is often better if
   they are placed early in the file.  On the other hand hand, that means
   players that don't intend to seek will have to read/skip these data
   no matter what.

   Because the Cues reference locations further in the file, it's often
   complicated to allocate the proper space for that element before all
   the locations are known.  Therefore, this layout is rarely used. used:

   *  SeekHead
   *  Info
   *  Tracks
   *  Chapters
   *  Attachments
   *  Tags
   *  Cues
   *  Clusters

25.3.4.  Optimum layout Layout for livestreaming

   In Livestreaming

   In livestreaming (Section 23.2) 23.2), only a few elements make sense.  For
   example, SeekHead and Cues are useless for example. useless.  All elements other than the
   Clusters MUST be placed before the Clusters.

   *  Info
   *  Tracks
   *  Attachments (rare)
   *  Tags
   *  Clusters

26.  Security Considerations

   Matroska inherits security considerations from EBML.

   Attacks on a Matroska Reader could include:

   *  Storage of an arbitrary and potentially executable data within an
      Attachment Element.  Matroska Readers that extract or use data
      from Matroska Attachments SHOULD check that the data adheres to
      expectations or not use the attachement. attachment.

   *  A Matroska Attachment with an inaccurate media type.

   *  Damage to the Encryption and Compression fields (Section 14) that
      would result in bogus binary data interpreted by the decoder.

   *  Chapter Codecs running unwanted commands on the host system.

   The same error handling done for EBML applies to Matroska files.
   Particular error handling is not covered in this specification specification, as
   this is depends on the goal of the Matroska Readers.  It is up to the
   decision of the Matroska Readers on how to handle the errors if they
   are recoverable in their code or not.  For example, if the checksum
   of the \Segment\Tracks is invalid invalid, some could decide to try to read
   the data anyway, some will just reject the file, and most will not
   even check it.

   Matroska Reader implementations need to be robust against malicious
   payloads.  Those related to denial of service are outlined in
   Section 2.1 of [RFC4732].

   Although rarer, the same may apply to a Matroska Writer.  Malicious
   stream data must not cause the Matroska Writer to misbehave, as this
   might allow an attacker access to transcoding gateways.

   As an audio and visual container format, a Matroska file or stream
   will potentially encapsulate numerous byte streams created with a
   variety of codecs.  Implementers will need to consider the security
   considerations of these encapsulated formats.

27.  IANA Considerations

27.1.  Matroska Element IDs Registry

   This document creates

   IANA has created a new IANA registry called the "Matroska Element IDs"
   registry.

   To

   The following are needed to register a new Element ID in this registry, one needs
   registry: an Element ID, a Change Controller (IETF or email of registrant)
   registrant), and an optional Reference to a document describing the
   Element ID.

   Element IDs are encoded using the VINT mechanism described in
   Section 4 of [RFC8794] and can be between one and five octets long.
   Five-octet-long
   Five-octet Element IDs are possible only if declared in the EBML
   header.
   Header.

   Element IDs are described in Section 5 of [RFC8794] [RFC8794], with errata 7189 the changes
   in [Err7189] and 7191. [Err7191].

   One-octet Matroska Element IDs are to be allocated according to the
   "RFC Required" policy [RFC8126].

   Two-octet Matroska Element IDs are to be allocated according to the
   "Specification Required" policy [RFC8126].

   Three-octet and four-octet Matroska Element IDs are to be allocated
   according to the "First Come First Served" policy [RFC8126].

   The allowed values in the Elements IDs "Matroska Element IDs" registry are similar
   to the ones found in the EBML "EBML Element IDs IDs" registry defined in
   Section 17.1 of [RFC8794].

   EBML Element IDs defined for the EBML Header -- as defined in
   Section 17.1 of [RFC8794] -- MUST NOT be used as Matroska Element
   IDs.

   Given the scarcity of the One-octet one-octet Element IDs, they should only be
   created to save space for elements found many times in a file.  For file (for
   example, within a BlockGroup or Chapters. Chapters).  The Four-octet four-octet Element
   IDs are mostly for synchronization of large elements.  They should
   only be used for such high level high-level elements.  Elements that are not
   expected to be used often should use Three-octet three-octet Element IDs.

   Elements found in Section 28 Appendix A have an assigned Matroska Element ID for
   historical reasons.  These elements are not in use and SHOULD NOT be
   reused unless there is are no other IDs available with the desired size.
   Such IDs are considered marked as reclaimed to "Reclaimed" in the IANA registry "Matroska Element IDs"
   registry, as they could be used for other things in the future.

   Matroska Element IDs Values found in this document are assigned as

   Table 54 shows the initial values as follows: contents of the "Matroska Element IDs"
   registry.

    +============+=============================+======================+
    | Element ID | Element Name                | Reference            |
    +============+=============================+======================+
    |       0x80 | ChapterDisplay              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.9  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x83 | TrackType                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.3    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x85 | ChapString                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.10 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x86 | CodecID                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.21   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x88 | FlagDefault                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.5    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x8E | Slices                      | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.5) Appendix A.5)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x91 | ChapterTimeStart            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.3  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x92 | ChapterTimeEnd              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.4  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x96 | CueRefTime                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.8  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x97 | CueRefCluster               | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.37) Appendix A.37)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x98 | ChapterFlagHidden           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.5  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x9A | FlagInterlaced              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x9B | BlockDuration               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.3    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x9C | FlagLacing                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.12   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x9D | FieldOrder                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0x9F | Channels                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.29.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA0 | BlockGroup                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA1 | Block                       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA2 | BlockVirtual                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.3) Appendix A.3)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA3 | SimpleBlock                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.4      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA4 | CodecState                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.6    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA5 | BlockAdditional             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.2.2  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA6 | BlockMore                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.2.1  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xA7 | Position                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.2      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xAA | CodecDecodeAll              | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.22) Appendix A.22)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xAB | PrevSize                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.3      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xAE | TrackEntry                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xAF | EncryptedBlock              | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.15) Appendix A.15)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB0 | PixelWidth                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.6 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB2 | CueDuration                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.4  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB3 | CueTime                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB5 | SamplingFrequency           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.29.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB6 | ChapterAtom                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB7 | CueTrackPositions           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xB9 | FlagEnabled                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.4    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xBA | PixelHeight                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.7 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xBB | CuePoint                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC0 | TrickTrackUID               | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.28) Appendix A.28)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC1 | TrickTrackSegmentUID        | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.29) Appendix A.29)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC4 | TrickMasterTrackSegmentUID  | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.32) Appendix A.32)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC6 | TrickTrackFlag              | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.30) Appendix A.30)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC7 | TrickMasterTrackUID         | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.31) Appendix A.31)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC8 | ReferenceFrame              | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.12) Appendix A.12)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xC9 | ReferenceOffset             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.13) Appendix A.13)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCA | ReferenceTimestamp          | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.14) Appendix A.14)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCB | BlockAdditionID             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.9) Appendix A.9)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCC | LaceNumber                  | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.7) Appendix A.7)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCD | FrameNumber                 | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.8) Appendix A.8)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCE | Delay                       | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.10) Appendix A.10)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xCF | SliceDuration               | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.11) Appendix A.11)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xD7 | TrackNumber                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xDB | CueReference                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.7  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE0 | Video                       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE1 | Audio                       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.29   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE2 | TrackOperation              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE3 | TrackCombinePlanes          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE4 | TrackPlane                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE5 | TrackPlaneUID               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE6 | TrackPlaneType              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.4 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE7 | Timestamp                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE8 | TimeSlice                   | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.6) Appendix A.6)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xE9 | TrackJoinBlocks             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.5 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xEA | CueCodecState               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.6  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xEB | CueRefCodecState            | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.39) Appendix A.39)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xED | TrackJoinUID                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.30.6 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xEE | BlockAddID                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.2.3  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xF0 | CueRelativePosition         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.3  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xF1 | CueClusterPosition          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.2  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xF7 | CueTrack                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.1  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xFA | ReferencePriority           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.4    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xFB | ReferenceBlock              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.5    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |       0xFD | ReferenceVirtual            | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.4) Appendix A.4)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x41A4 | BlockAddIDName              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.17.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x41E4 | BlockAdditionMapping        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.17   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x41E7 | BlockAddIDType              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.17.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x41ED | BlockAddIDExtraData         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.17.4 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x41F0 | BlockAddIDValue             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.17.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4254 | ContentCompAlgo             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.6 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4255 | ContentCompSettings         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.7 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x437C | ChapLanguage                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.11 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x437D | ChapLanguageBCP47           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.12 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x437E | ChapCountry                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.13 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4444 | SegmentFamily               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.7      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4461 | DateUTC                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.11     |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x447A | TagLanguage                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.2  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x447B | TagLanguageBCP47            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.3  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4484 | TagDefault                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.4  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4485 | TagBinary                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.6  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4487 | TagString                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.5  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4489 | Duration                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.10     |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x44B4 | TagDefaultBogus             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.43) Appendix A.43)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x450D | ChapProcessPrivate          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.16 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x45A3 | TagName                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2.1  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x45B9 | EditionEntry                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x45BC | EditionUID                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x45DB | EditionFlagDefault          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x45DD | EditionFlagOrdered          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.3    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x465C | FileData                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1.4    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4660 | FileMediaType               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1.3    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4661 | FileUsedStartTime           | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.41) Appendix A.41)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4662 | FileUsedEndTime             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.42) Appendix A.42)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x466E | FileName                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4675 | FileReferral                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.40) Appendix A.40)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x467E | FileDescription             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x46AE | FileUID                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1.5    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E1 | ContentEncAlgo              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.9 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E2 | ContentEncKeyID             | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.31.10        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E3 | ContentSignature            | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.33) Appendix A.33)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E4 | ContentSigKeyID             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.34) Appendix A.34)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E5 | ContentSigAlgo              | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.35) Appendix A.35)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E6 | ContentSigHashAlgo          | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.36) Appendix A.36)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E7 | ContentEncAESSettings       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.31.11        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x47E8 | AESSettingsCipherMode       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.31.12        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4D80 | MuxingApp                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.13     |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x4DBB | Seek                        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.1.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5031 | ContentEncodingOrder        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5032 | ContentEncodingScope        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5033 | ContentEncodingType         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.4 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5034 | ContentCompression          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.5 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5035 | ContentEncryption           | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.8 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x535F | CueRefNumber                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.38) Appendix A.38)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x536E | Name                        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.18   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5378 | CueBlockNumber              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5.1.2.5  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x537F | TrackOffset                 | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.18) Appendix A.18)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x53AB | SeekID                      | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.1.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x53AC | SeekPosition                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.1.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x53B8 | StereoMode                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x53B9 | OldStereoMode               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.5 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x53C0 | AlphaMode                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.4 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54AA | PixelCropBottom             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.8 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54B0 | DisplayWidth                | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.12        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54B2 | DisplayUnit                 | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.14        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54B3 | AspectRatioType             | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.24) Appendix A.24)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54BA | DisplayHeight               | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.13        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54BB | PixelCropTop                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.28.9 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54CC | PixelCropLeft               | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.10        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x54DD | PixelCropRight              | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.11        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AA | FlagForced                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.6    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AB | FlagHearingImpaired         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.7    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AC | FlagVisualImpaired          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.8    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AD | FlagTextDescriptions        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.9    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AE | FlagOriginal                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.10   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55AF | FlagCommentary              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.11   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B0 | Colour                      | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.16        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B1 | MatrixCoefficients          | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.17        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B2 | BitsPerChannel              | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.18        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B3 | ChromaSubsamplingHorz       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.19        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B4 | ChromaSubsamplingVert       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.20        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B5 | CbSubsamplingHorz           | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.21        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B6 | CbSubsamplingVert           | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.22        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B7 | ChromaSitingHorz            | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.23        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B8 | ChromaSitingVert            | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.24        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55B9 | Range                       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.25        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55BA | TransferCharacteristics     | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.26        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55BB | Primaries                   | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.27        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55BC | MaxCLL                      | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.28        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55BD | MaxFALL                     | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.29        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D0 | MasteringMetadata           | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.30        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D1 | PrimaryRChromaticityX       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.31        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D2 | PrimaryRChromaticityY       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.32        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D3 | PrimaryGChromaticityX       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.33        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D4 | PrimaryGChromaticityY       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.34        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D5 | PrimaryBChromaticityX       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.35        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D6 | PrimaryBChromaticityY       | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.36        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D7 | WhitePointChromaticityX     | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.37        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D8 | WhitePointChromaticityY     | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.38        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55D9 | LuminanceMax                | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.39        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55DA | LuminanceMin                | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.40        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x55EE | MaxBlockAdditionID          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.16   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5654 | ChapterStringUID            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.2  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x56AA | CodecDelay                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.25   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x56BB | SeekPreRoll                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.26   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5741 | WritingApp                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.14     |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x5854 | SilentTracks                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.1) Appendix A.1)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x58D7 | SilentTrackNumber           | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.2) Appendix A.2)        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x61A7 | AttachedFile                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6240 | ContentEncoding             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6264 | BitDepth                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.29.4 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63A2 | CodecPrivate                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.22   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C0 | Targets                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C3 | ChapterPhysicalEquiv        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.8  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C4 | TagChapterUID               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.5  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C5 | TagTrackUID                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.3  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C6 | TagAttachmentUID            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.6  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63C9 | TagEditionUID               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.4  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x63CA | TargetType                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.2  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6624 | TrackTranslate              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.27   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x66A5 | TrackTranslateTrackID       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.27.1 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x66BF | TrackTranslateCodec         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.27.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x66FC | TrackTranslateEditionUID    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.27.3 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x67C8 | SimpleTag                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x68CA | TargetTypeValue             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1.1.1  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6911 | ChapProcessCommand          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.17 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6922 | ChapProcessTime             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.18 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6924 | ChapterTranslate            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.8      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6933 | ChapProcessData             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.19 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6944 | ChapProcess                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.14 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6955 | ChapProcessCodecID          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.15 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x69A5 | ChapterTranslateID          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.8.1    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x69BF | ChapterTranslateCodec       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.8.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x69FC | ChapterTranslateEditionUID  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.8.3    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6D80 | ContentEncodings            | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.31   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6DE7 | MinCache                    | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.16) Appendix A.16)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6DF8 | MaxCache                    | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.17) Appendix A.17)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6E67 | ChapterSegmentUUID          | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.6  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6EBC | ChapterSegmentEditionUID    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.7  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x6FAB | TrackOverlay                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.23) Appendix A.23)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7373 | Tag                         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7384 | SegmentFilename             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.2      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x73A4 | SegmentUUID                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.1      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x73C4 | ChapterUID                  | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7.1.4.1  |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x73C5 | TrackUID                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7446 | AttachmentLink              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.24   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x75A1 | BlockAdditions              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.2    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x75A2 | DiscardPadding              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3.5.7    |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7670 | Projection                  | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.41        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7671 | ProjectionType              | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.42        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7672 | ProjectionPrivate           | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.43        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7673 | ProjectionPoseYaw           | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.44        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7674 | ProjectionPosePitch         | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.45        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7675 | ProjectionPoseRoll          | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.46        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x78B5 | OutputSamplingFrequency     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.29.2 |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7BA9 | Title                       | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.12     |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |     0x7D7B | ChannelPositions            | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.27) Appendix A.27)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x22B59C | Language                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.19   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x22B59D | LanguageBCP47               | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.20   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x23314F | TrackTimestampScale         | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.15   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x234E7A | DefaultDecodedFieldDuration | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.14   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x2383E3 | FrameRate                   | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.26) Appendix A.26)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x23E383 | DefaultDuration             | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.13   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x258688 | CodecName                   | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4.1.23   |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x26B240 | CodecDownloadURL            | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.21) Appendix A.21)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x2AD7B1 | TimestampScale              | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.9      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x2EB524 | UncompressedFourCC          | Described in RFC 9559, Section    |
    |            |                             | 5.1.4.1.28.15        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x2FB523 | GammaValue                  | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.25) Appendix A.25)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3A9697 | CodecSettings               | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.19) Appendix A.19)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3B4040 | CodecInfoURL                | Reclaimed (RFC 9559, |
    |            |                             | (Section 28.20) Appendix A.20)       |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3C83AB | PrevFilename                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.4      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3CB923 | PrevUUID                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.3      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3E83BB | NextFilename                | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.6      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    |   0x3EB923 | NextUUID                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2.5      |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1043A770 | Chapters                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.7        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x114D9B74 | SeekHead                    | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.1        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1254C367 | Tags                        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.8        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1549A966 | Info                        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.2        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1654AE6B | Tracks                      | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.4        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x18538067 | Segment                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1          |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1941A469 | Attachments                 | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.6        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1C53BB6B | Cues                        | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.5        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+
    | 0x1F43B675 | Cluster                     | Described in RFC 9559,            |
    |            |                             | Section 5.1.3        |
    +------------+-----------------------------+----------------------+

       Table 55: IDs and Names for Matroska 54: Initial Contents of "Matroska Element IDs assigned by
                               this document IDs" Registry

27.2.  Chapter Codec IDs Registry

   This document creates

   IANA has created a new IANA registry called the "Matroska Chapter Codec
   IDs" registry.  The values correspond to the unsigned integer
   ChapProcessCodecID value described in Section 5.1.7.1.4.15.

   To register a new Chapter Codec ID in this registry, one needs a
   Chapter Codec ID, a Change Controller (IETF or email of registrant) registrant),
   and an optional Reference to a document describing the Chapter Codec
   ID.

   The Chapter Codec IDs are to be allocated according to the "First
   Come First Served" policy [RFC8126].

   ChapProcessCodecID values

   Values of "0" and "1" are RESERVED to the IETF reserved for future use. use (with the IETF as
   the Change Controller).

27.3.  Media Types

   Matroska files and streams are found in three main forms: audio-video
   files, audio-only audio-only, and occasionally with stereoscopic video tracks.

   Historically

   Historically, Matroska files and streams have used the following
   media types with a an "x-" prefix.  For better compatibility compatibility, a system
   SHOULD be able to handle both formats.  Newer systems SHOULD NOT use
   the historic format and use the format that follows the [RFC6838] format in
   [RFC6838] instead.

   Please register

   IANA has registered three media types, types per the [RFC6838] templates are below: (see
   [RFC6838]) in the following subsections.

27.3.1.  For files containing video tracks Files Containing Video Tracks

   Type name:  video

   Subtype name:  matroska

   Required parameters:  N/A

   Optional parameters:  N/A

   Encoding considerations:  as  As per this document RFCs 9559 and RFC8794 8794

   Security considerations:  See Section 26. 26 of RFC 9559.

   Interoperability considerations:  Due to the extensibility of
      Matroska, it is possible to encounter files with unknown but valid
      EBML Elements.  Readers should be ready to handle this case.  The
      fixed byte order, octet boundaries boundaries, and UTF-8 usage allow for
      broad
      interoparability. interoperability.

   Published specification:  THISRFC  RFC 9559

   Applications that use this media type:  FFmpeg, VLC, ...

   Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A

   Additional information:

   *

      Deprecated alias names for this type:  video/x-matroska

   *
      Magic number(s):  N/A

   *
      File extension(s):  mkv

   *
      Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

   Person & email address to contact for further information:  IETF
      CELLAR WG cellar@ietf.org (cellar@ietf.org)

   Intended usage:  COMMON

   Restrictions on usage:  None

   Author:  IETF CELLAR WG

   Change controller:  IETF
   Provisional registration? (standards tree only):  No

27.3.2.  For files containing audio tracks Files Containing Audio Tracks with no video tracks No Video Tracks

   Type name:  audio

   Subtype name:  matroska

   Required parameters:  N/A

   Optional parameters:  N/A

   Encoding considerations:  as  As per this document RFCs 9559 and RFC8794 8794

   Security considerations:  See Section 26. 26 of RFC 9559.

   Interoperability considerations:  Due to the extensibility of
      Matroska, it is possible to encounter files with unknown but valid
      EBML Elements.  Readers should be ready to handle this case.  The
      fixed byte order, octet boundaries boundaries, and UTF-8 usage allow for
      broad
      interoparability. interoperability.

   Published specification:  THISRFC  RFC 9559

   Applications that use this media type:  FFmpeg, VLC, ...

   Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A

   Additional information:

   *

      Deprecated alias names for this type:  audio/x-matroska

   *
      Magic number(s):  N/A

   *
      File extension(s):  mka

   *
      Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

   Person & email address to contact for further information:  IETF
      CELLAR WG cellar@ietf.org (cellar@ietf.org)

   Intended usage:  COMMON

   Restrictions on usage:  None

   Author:  IETF CELLAR WG

   Change controller:  IETF
   Provisional registration? (standards tree only):  No

27.3.3.  For files containing Files Containing a stereoscopic video track Stereoscopic Video Track

   Type name:  video

   Subtype name:  matroska-3d

   Required parameters:  N/A

   Optional parameters:  N/A

   Encoding considerations:  as  As per this document RFCs 9559 and RFC8794 8794

   Security considerations:  See Section 26. 26 of RFC 9559.

   Interoperability considerations:  Due to the extensibility of
      Matroska, it is possible to encounter files with unknown but valid
      EBML Elements.  Readers should be ready to handle this case.  The
      fixed byte order, octet boundaries boundaries, and UTF-8 usage allow for
      broad
      interoparability. interoperability.

   Published specification:  THISRFC  RFC 9559

   Applications that use this media type:  FFmpeg, VLC, ...

   Fragment identifier considerations:  N/A

   Additional information:

   *

      Deprecated alias names for this type:  video/x-matroska-3d

   *
      Magic number(s):  N/A

   *
      File extension(s):  mk3d

   *
      Macintosh file type code(s):  N/A

   Person & email address to contact for further information:  IETF
      CELLAR WG cellar@ietf.org (cellar@ietf.org)

   Intended usage:  COMMON

   Restrictions on usage:  None

   Author:  IETF CELLAR WG

   Change controller:  IETF
   Provisional registration? (standards tree only):  No

29.

28.  References

28.1.  Normative References

   [BCP47]    Phillips, A., Ed. and M. Davis, Ed., "Tags for Identifying
              Languages", BCP 47, RFC 5646, DOI 10.17487/RFC5646,
              September 2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5646>.

   [CIE-1931] Commission Internationale de l'Eclairage, Wikipedia, "CIE 1931 Standard
              Colorimetric System", 1931, color space",
              <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIE_1931_color_space>.

   [ISO639-2] United States Library Of Congress, International Organization for Standardization, "Codes for
              the Representation of Names of Languages", ISO 639-2:1998, 21 639-2,
              December 2017, <https://www.loc.gov/standards/iso639-
              2/php/code_list.php>.

   [ISO9899]  International Organization for Standardization,
              "Information technology -- Programming languages -- C",
              ISO/IEC 9899:2011,
              2011, <https://www.iso.org/standard/57853.html>. 9899:2018, June 2018,
              <https://www.iso.org/standard/74528.html>.

   [ITU-H.273] International Telecommunication Union,
              ITU-T, "Coding-independent code points for video signal
              type identification", ITU ITU-T Recommendation H.273, 24
              September 2021, <https://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-H.273/en>. 2023,
              <https://www.itu.int/rec/T-REC-H.273-202309-P/en>.

   [RFC1950]  Deutsch, P. and J. Gailly, "ZLIB Compressed Data Format
              Specification version 3.3", RFC 1950,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC1950, May 1996,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1950>.

   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

   [RFC4122]  Leach, P., Mealling, M., and R. Salz, "A Universally
              Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace", RFC 4122,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC4122, July 2005,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4122>.

   [RFC6838]  Freed, N., Klensin, J., and T. Hansen, "Media Type
              Specifications and Registration Procedures", BCP 13,
              RFC 6838, DOI 10.17487/RFC6838, January 2013,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6838>.

   [RFC8081]  Lilley, C., "The "font" Top-Level Media Type", RFC 8081,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC8081, February 2017,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8081>.

   [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for
              Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
              RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.

   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
              2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

   [RFC8794]  Lhomme, S., Rice, D., and M. Bunkus, "Extensible Binary
              Meta Language", RFC 8794, DOI 10.17487/RFC8794, July 2020,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8794>.

30.

28.2.  Informative References

   [AVIFormat] Microsoft,
              Microsoft Corporation, "AVI RIFF File Reference", 31 May 2018, June
              2023, <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-
              us/windows/win32/directshow/avi-riff-file-reference>.

   [Blowfish] Schneier, B., "The Blowfish Encryption Algorithm", 1993,
              <https://www.schneier.com/academic/blowfish/>.

   [BZIP2]    Seward, J., "bzip2", 18 July 1996, 2019,
              <https://sourceware.org/bzip2/>.

   [DivXTrickTrack]
              "DivX Trick Track Extensions", 14 December 2010,
              <https://web.archive.org/web/20101222001148/
              http://labs.divx.com/node/16601>.

   [DivXWorldFonts] "DivX World Fonts Extensions", 14
              "World Fonts", December 2010,
              <https://web.archive.org/web/20110214132246/
              http://labs.divx.com/node/16602>.

   [DVD-Video]
              DVD Forum, "DVD-Books: Part 3 DVD-Video Book", 1 November
              1995, <http://www.dvdforum.org/>.

   [FIPS.197] US

   [Err7189]  RFC Errata, Erratum ID 7189, RFC 8794,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid7189>.

   [Err7191]  RFC Errata, Erratum ID 7191, RFC 8794,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/errata/eid7191>.

   [FIPS197]  National Institute of Standards and Technology, Technology (NIST),
              "Advanced Encryption Standard (AES)", FIPS PUB 197,
              DOI 10.6028/NIST.FIPS.197, 26 November 2001,
              <https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/fips/197/
              final>.

   [FIPS.46-3] US

   [FIPS46-3] National Institute of Standards and Technology, Technology (NIST),
              "Data Encryption Standard (DES)", FIPS PUB 46, 25 October
              1999,
              <https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/fips/46/3/
              archive/1999-10-25>.

   [FourCC-RGB] Silicon.dk ApS,
              FOURCC, "RGB Pixel Format FourCCs", pixel formats",
              <https://web.archive.org/web/20160609214806/
              https://www.fourcc.org/rgb.php>.  [FourCC-RGB] Silicon.dk ApS,
              "RGB Pixel Format FourCCs",
              <https://web.archive.org/web/20160609214806/

   [FourCC-YUV] Silicon.dk ApS,
              FOURCC, "YUV Pixel Format FourCCs", pixel formats",
              <https://web.archive.org/web/20160609214806/
              https://www.fourcc.org/yuv.php>.

   [JPEG] International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee,
              "Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous- Tone Still
              Images",     ITU, "INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY - DIGITAL COMPRESSION AND
              CODING OF CONTINUOUS-TONE STILL IMAGES - REQUIREMENTS AND
              GUIDELINES", ITU Recommendation T.81, September 1992,
              <https://www.w3.org/Graphics/JPEG/itu-t81.pdf>.

   [LZO]      Tarreau, W., Rodgman, R., W. and M. Oberhumer, "Lempel-Ziv- Oberhumer
              compression", 30 R. Rodgman, "LZO stream format as
              understood by Linux's LZO decompressor", October 2018,
              <https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/lzo.txt>.

   [MatroskaCodec]
              Lhomme, S., Bunkus, M., and D. Rice, "Media "Matroska Media
              Container Codec Specifications", Work in Progress,
              Internet-Draft,
              draft-ietf-cellar-codec-10, 12 April 2021,
              <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-cellar-
              codec-10>. draft-ietf-cellar-codec-12, 27 January
              2024, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-
              cellar-codec-12>.

   [MatroskaTags]
              Lhomme, S., Bunkus, M., and D. Rice, "Matroska Media
              Container Tag Specifications", Work in Progress, Internet-
              Draft, draft-ietf-cellar-tags-10, 12 April 2021, draft-ietf-cellar-tags-12, 22 October 2023,
              <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-cellar-
              tags-10>.
              tags-12>.

   [MCF] "Media Container Format", 17 July 2002,      "MCF specification, introduction",
              <http://mukoli.free.fr/mcf/>.

   [MSRGB] Microsoft, "WMF Compression    Microsoft Corporation, "Compression Enumeration", June
              2021, <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-
              us/openspecs/windows_protocols/ms-wmf/4e588f70-bd92-4a6f-
              b77f-35d0feaf7a57>.

   [MSYUV16] Microsoft,  Microsoft Corporation, "10-bit and 16-bit YUV Video
              Formats",
              <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/
              medfound/10-bit-and-16-bit-yuv-video-formats>. November 2022, <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-
              us/windows/win32/medfound/10-bit-and-16-bit-yuv-video-
              formats>.

   [MSYUV8] Microsoft,   Microsoft Corporation, "Recommended 8-Bit YUV Formats for
              Video Rendering",
              <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-
              us/windows/win32/medfound/recommended-8-bit-yuv-formats-
              for-video-rendering>. January 2021,
              <https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/medfound/
              recommended-8-bit-yuv-formats-for-video-rendering>.

   [RFC0959]  Postel, J. and J. Reynolds, "File Transfer Protocol",
              STD 9, RFC 959, DOI 10.17487/RFC0959, October 1985,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc959>.

   [RFC2083]  Boutell, T., "PNG (Portable Network Graphics)
              Specification Version 1.0", RFC 2083,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC2083, March 1997,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2083>.

   [RFC3533]  Pfeiffer, S., "The Ogg Encapsulation Format Version 0",
              RFC 3533, DOI 10.17487/RFC3533, May 2003,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3533>.

   [RFC4732]  Handley, M., Ed., Rescorla, E., Ed., and IAB, "Internet
              Denial-of-Service Considerations", RFC 4732,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC4732, December 2006,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4732>.

   [RFC9110]  Fielding, R., Ed., Nottingham, M., Ed., and J. Reschke,
              Ed., "HTTP Semantics", STD 97, RFC 9110,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC9110, June 2022,
              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9110>.

   [SMB-CIFS] Microsoft Corporation, "Common "[MS-CIFS]: Common Internet File
              System (CIFS) Protocol", 1 October 2020,
              <https://winprotocoldoc.blob.core.windows.net/
              productionwindowsarchives/MS-CIFS/%5bMS-CIFS%5d.pdf>.

   [SP.800-38A] US

   [SP800-38A]
              National Institute of Standards and Technology, Technology (NIST),
              "Recommendation for Block Cipher Modes of Operation:
              Methods and Techniques", DOI 10.6028/NIST.SP.800-38A, 1 NIST
              Special Publication 800-38A, December 2001,
              <https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/fips/197/ final>.

   [SP.800-67] US
              <https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/Legacy/SP/
              nistspecialpublication800-38a.pdf>.

   [SP800-67] National Institute of Standards and Technology, Technology (NIST),
              "Recommendation for the Triple Data Encryption Algorithm
              (TDEA) Block Cipher", DOI 10.6028/10.6028/NIST.SP.800-67r2, 1 10.6028/NIST.SP.800-67r2, NIST
              Special Publication 800-67, November 2017, <https://csrc.nist.gov/publications/detail/sp/800-67/rev-
              2/final>.
              <https://nvlpubs.nist.gov/nistpubs/SpecialPublications/
              NIST.SP.800-67r2.pdf>.

   [Twofish]  Schneier, B., Kelsey, J., Whiting, D., Wagner, D., Hall,
              C., and N. Ferguson, "Twofish: A 128-Bit Block Cipher", 15
              June 1998, <https://www.schneier.com/academic/twofish/>.

   [WebM-Enc] Galligan, F., "WebM Encryption", 19 September 2016,
              <https://www.webmproject.org/docs/webm-encryption/>.

   [WebVTT]   Pieters, S., Pfeiffer, S., Ed., Jaegenstedt, P., and I.
              Hickson,
              "WebVTT Cue Identifier", 4 "WebVTT: The Web Video Text Tracks Format", W3C
              Candidate Recommendation, April 2019,
              <https://www.w3.org/TR/webvtt1/#webvtt-cue-identifier>.

28.  Annex A:
              <https://www.w3.org/TR/2019/CR-webvtt1-20190404/>.

Appendix A.  Historic Deprecated Elements

   As Matroska has evolved since 2002 2002, many parts that were considered
   for use in the format were never used and often incorrectly designed.
   Many of the elements that were then defined then are not found in any
   known files but were part of public specs.  DivX also had a few
   custom elements that were designed for custom features.

   We

   In this appendix, we list these elements that have a known ID that SHOULD
   NOT be reused to avoid colliding with existing files.  They  These might be
   reassigned by IANA in the future if there are no more IDs for a given
   size.  A short description of what each ID was used for is included,
   but the text is not normative.

28.1.

A.1.  SilentTracks Element

   type / id:  master / 0x5854
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\SilentTracks
   documentation:  The list of tracks that are not used in that part of
      the stream.  It is useful when using overlay tracks on for seeking or
      to decide
      deciding what track to use.

28.2.

A.2.  SilentTrackNumber Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x58D7
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\SilentTracks\SilentTrackNumber
   documentation:  One of the track number numbers that are is not used from now on
      in the stream.  It could change later if not specified as silent
      in a further Cluster.

28.3.

A.3.  BlockVirtual Element

   type / id:  binary / 0xA2
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\BlockVirtual
   documentation:  A Block with no data.  It must be stored in the
      stream at the place the real Block would be in display order.

28.4.

A.4.  ReferenceVirtual Element

   type / id:  integer / 0xFD
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceVirtual
   documentation:  The Segment Position of the data that would otherwise
      be in position of the virtual block.

28.5.

A.5.  Slices Element

   type / id:  master / 0x8E
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices
   documentation:  Contains slices description.

28.6.

A.6.  TimeSlice Element

   type / id:  master / 0xE8
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice
   documentation:  Contains extra time information about the data
      contained in the Block.  Being able to interpret this Element is
      not required for playback.

28.7.

A.7.  LaceNumber Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCC
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice\LaceNumber
   documentation:  The reverse number of the frame in the lace (0 is the
      last frame, 1 is the next to last, etc.).  Being able to interpret
      this Element is not required for playback.

28.8.

A.8.  FrameNumber Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCD
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice\FrameNumber
   documentation:  The number of the frame to generate from this lace
      with this delay (allow you to generate (allows for the generation of many frames from the
      same Block/Frame).

28.9.

A.9.  BlockAdditionID Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCB
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice\BlockAdditionID
   documentation:  The ID of the BlockAdditional Element (0 is the main
      Block).

28.10.

A.10.  Delay Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCE
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice\Delay
   documentation:  The delay to apply to the Element, expressed in Track
      Ticks; see Section 11.1.

28.11.

A.11.  SliceDuration Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCF
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\Slices\TimeSlice\SliceDuration
   documentation:  The duration to apply to the Element, expressed in
      Track Ticks; see Section 11.1.

28.12.

A.12.  ReferenceFrame Element

   type / id:  master / 0xC8
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceFrame
   documentation:  Contains information about the last reference frame.
      See [DivXTrickTrack].

28.13.

A.13.  ReferenceOffset Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xC9
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceFrame\ReferenceOffset
   documentation:  The relative offset, in bytes, from the previous
      BlockGroup element for this Smooth FF/RW video track to the
      containing BlockGroup element.  See [DivXTrickTrack].

28.14.

A.14.  ReferenceTimestamp Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xCA
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\BlockGroup\ReferenceFrame\ReferenceTimestamp
   documentation:  The timestamp of the BlockGroup pointed to by
      ReferenceOffset, expressed in Track Ticks; see Section 11.1.  See
      [DivXTrickTrack].

28.15.

A.15.  EncryptedBlock Element

   type / id:  binary / 0xAF
   path:  \Segment\Cluster\EncryptedBlock
   documentation:  Similar to SimpleBlock, see SimpleBlock (see Section 10.2, 10.2), but the
      data inside the Block are Transformed (encrypt (encrypted and/or signed).

28.16.

A.16.  MinCache Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x6DE7
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\MinCache
   documentation:  The minimum number of frames a player should be able
      to cache during playback.  If set to 0, the reference pseudo-cache
      system is not used.

28.17.

A.17.  MaxCache Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x6DF8
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\MaxCache
   documentation:  The maximum cache size necessary to store referenced
      frames in and the current frame.  0 means no cache is needed.

28.18.

A.18.  TrackOffset Element

   type / id:  integer / 0x537F
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOffset
   documentation:  A value to add to the Block's Timestamp, expressed in
      Matroska Ticks -- i.e., in nanoseconds; see Section 11.1.  This
      can be used to adjust the playback offset of a track.

28.19.

A.19.  CodecSettings Element

   type / id:  utf-8 / 0x3A9697
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecSettings
   documentation:  A string describing the encoding setting used.

28.20.

A.20.  CodecInfoURL Element

   type / id:  string / 0x3B4040
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecInfoURL
   documentation:  A URL to find information about the codec used.

28.21.

A.21.  CodecDownloadURL Element

   type / id:  string / 0x26B240
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecDownloadURL
   documentation:  A URL to download about the codec used.

28.22.

A.22.  CodecDecodeAll Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xAA
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\CodecDecodeAll
   documentation:  Set to 1 if the codec can decode potentially damaged
      data.

28.23.

A.23.  TrackOverlay Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x6FAB
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrackOverlay
   documentation:  Specify that this track is an overlay track for the
      Track specified (in the u-integer).  That  This means that when this
      track has a gap on SilentTracks, the overlay track should be used
      instead.  The order of multiple TrackOverlay matters, matters; the first
      one is the one that should be used.  If the first one is not found
      found, it should be the second, etc.

28.24.

A.24.  AspectRatioType Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x54B3
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\AspectRatioType
   documentation:  Specify the possible modifications to the aspect
      ratio.

28.25.

A.25.  GammaValue Element

   type / id:  float / 0x2FB523
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\GammaValue
   documentation:  Gamma Value.

28.26. value.

A.26.  FrameRate Element

   type / id:  float / 0x2383E3
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Video\FrameRate
   documentation:  Number of frames per second.  This value is
      Informational
      informational only.  It is intended for constant frame rate
      streams,
      streams and should not be used for a variable frame rate
      TrackEntry.

28.27.

A.27.  ChannelPositions Element

   type / id:  binary / 0x7D7B
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\Audio\ChannelPositions
   documentation:  Table of horizontal angles for each successive
      channel.

28.28.

A.28.  TrickTrackUID Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xC0
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrickTrackUID
   documentation:  The TrackUID of the Smooth FF/RW video in the paired
      EBML structure corresponding to this video track.  See
      [DivXTrickTrack].

28.29.

A.29.  TrickTrackSegmentUID Element

   type / id:  binary / 0xC1
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrickTrackSegmentUID
   documentation:  The SegmentUID of the Segment containing the track
      identified by TrickTrackUID.  See [DivXTrickTrack].

28.30.

A.30.  TrickTrackFlag Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xC6
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrickTrackFlag
   documentation:  Set to 1 if this video track is a Smooth FF/RW track.
      If set to 1, MasterTrackUID and MasterTrackSegUID should be
      present
      present, and BlockGroups for this track must contain
      ReferenceFrame structures.  Otherwise, TrickTrackUID and
      TrickTrackSegUID must be present if this track has a corresponding
      Smooth FF/RW track.  See [DivXTrickTrack].

28.31.

A.31.  TrickMasterTrackUID Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xC7
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrickMasterTrackUID
   documentation:  The TrackUID of the video track in the paired EBML
      structure that corresponds to this Smooth FF/RW track.  See
      [DivXTrickTrack].

28.32.

A.32.  TrickMasterTrackSegmentUID Element

   type / id:  binary / 0xC4
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\TrickMasterTrackSegmentUID
   documentation:  The SegmentUID of the Segment containing the track
      identified by MasterTrackUID.  See [DivXTrickTrack].

28.33.

A.33.  ContentSignature Element

   type / id:  binary / 0x47E3
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentSignature
   documentation:  A cryptographic signature of the contents.

28.34.

A.34.  ContentSigKeyID Element

   type / id:  binary / 0x47E4
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentSigKeyID
   documentation:  This is the ID of the private key that the data was
      signed with.

28.35.

A.35.  ContentSigAlgo Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x47E5
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentSigAlgo
   documentation:  The algorithm used for the signature.

28.36.

A.36.  ContentSigHashAlgo Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x47E6
   path:  \Segment\Tracks\TrackEntry\ContentEncodings\ContentEncoding\Co
      ntentEncryption\ContentSigHashAlgo
   documentation:  The hash algorithm used for the signature.

28.37.

A.37.  CueRefCluster Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x97
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueReference\CueRefCl
      uster
   documentation:  The Segment Position of the Cluster containing the
      referenced Block.

28.38.

A.38.  CueRefNumber Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x535F
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueReference\CueRefNu
      mber
   documentation:  Number of the referenced Block of Track X in the
      specified Cluster.

28.39.

A.39.  CueRefCodecState Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0xEB
   path:  \Segment\Cues\CuePoint\CueTrackPositions\CueReference\CueRefCo
      decState
   documentation:  The Segment Position of the Codec State corresponding
      to this referenced Element.  0 means that the data is taken from
      the initial Track Entry.

28.40.

A.40.  FileReferral Element

   type / id:  binary / 0x4675
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileReferral
   documentation:  A binary value that a track/codec can refer to when
      the attachment is needed.

28.41.

A.41.  FileUsedStartTime Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x4661
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileUsedStartTime
   documentation:  The timestamp at which this optimized font attachment
      comes into context, expressed in Segment Ticks Ticks, which is are based on
      TimestampScale.  See [DivXWorldFonts].

28.42.

A.42.  FileUsedEndTime Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x4662
   path:  \Segment\Attachments\AttachedFile\FileUsedEndTime
   documentation:  The timestamp at which this optimized font attachment
      goes out of context, expressed in Segment Ticks Ticks, which is are based
      on TimestampScale.  See [DivXWorldFonts].

28.43.

A.43.  TagDefaultBogus Element

   type / id:  uinteger / 0x44B4
   path:  \Segment\Tags\Tag\+SimpleTag\TagDefaultBogus
   documentation:  A variant of the TagDefault element with a bogus
      Element ID; see Section 5.1.8.1.2.4.

Authors' Addresses

   Steve Lhomme
   Email: slhomme@matroska.org

   Moritz Bunkus
   Email: moritz@bunkus.org

   Dave Rice
   Email: dave@dericed.com