You can just include the rtpenc. H header from its existing location in the ffmpeg source directory. Since that header doesn't produce any object code your resulting binary won't be a derivative work of the ffmpeg library, but if you want you could just write a compatible structure definition in your own code and access the ffmpeg structure with a pointer/variable defined using your own definition Be careful because that structure is not a publicly-facing component of ffmpeg and is likely to change without warning in different versions.
You can just include the rtpenc. H header from its existing location in the ffmpeg source directory. Since that header doesn't produce any object code your resulting binary won't be a derivative work of the ffmpeg library, but if you want you could just write a compatible structure definition in your own code and access the ffmpeg structure with a pointer/variable defined using your own definition.Be careful because that structure is not a publicly-facing component of ffmpeg and is likely to change without warning in different versions.
It did work when I symlinked the header in /usr/local/include/, so your approach seems to be the way to go. Thanks! – ericreeves Sep 15 at 19:00.
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