The generated gir file marks the size parameter as "out" by default.
This is wrong in the context of a caller allocated buffer with a given size.
Explicitly marking the size parameter as (in) fixes the issue.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4399>
gst_base_src_new_segment() does not send the segment right away, which
may break events ordering if subclass sends other events after
calling it.
Introducing a variant pushing the segment right away to preserve
ordering in such cases.
Will be used by appsrc which has its own internal queue where we need to
preserve events order.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4297>
A flush is resetting or not depending on the reset_time argument in the
FLUSH_STOP event is set.
Resetting flushes reset the running time to zero and clear any existing
segment. These are the kind of flushes used by flushing seeks, and by far the
most common. Non-resetting flushes are much more niche, used for instance for
quality changes in adaptivedemux2 and MediaSource Extensions in WebKit.
A key difference between the seek use case and the quality change use case is
that the latter is much more removed from the player. Seeks generally occur
because an user request it, whereas quality changes can be automatic.
Currently, there are three notable cases where position queries fail:
(a) before pre-roll, as there is no segment yet. This is one is understandable,
as for at least some time before pre-roll, we cannot know if a media stream
would start at 0 or any other position, or the duration of the stream for that
matter.
(b) after a resetting flush caused by a seek. This kind of flush resets the
segment, so it's not surprising position queries fail. This is inconvenient for
applications, as it means they always need to handle position reporting (e.g.
in UI) separately every time they request a seek, e.g. by caching the seek
target and using it when the position query fail. I'm not fond of this
behavior, as it's unintuitive and makes GStreamer harder to use, but at this
point could be difficult to change and it's not within the scope of this
proposal.
(c) after a non-resetting flush, e.g. caused by a quality change. The segment
is not reset in this case. Position queries work until a FLUSH_STOP is sent.
Querying position after a FLUSH_START but before a FLUSH_STOP works, and
returns the position the sink was at the moment the FLUSH_START was received.
**This in fact the only reliable way (short of adding probes to the sink
element) to get this position**, as FLUSH_START receival is asynchronous with
playback.
In the case (c), as of currently, position queries fail once the FLUSH_STOP is
received. But unlike in (b), the application has no position to fall back to,
as the FLUSH_START was initiated by elements inside the pipeline that are in a
lower layer of abstraction. Specific applications that have control of both the
player and the internal element doing the flushing -- such as WebKit -- can
still work around this problem through layer violations (lucky!), but this
still puts in question this behavior in GStreamer.
This patch fixes this case by amending the position query handler of basesink,
which was previously erroneously returning early with "wrong state", even
though the flush occurs in PAUSED or PLAYING.
A unit test checking this behavior has also been added.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3471>
The previous implementation was a bit primitive, assuming the subclass
had registered a template name starting with sink_ . Instead make
the effort of parsing the actual template name, and use that to generate
the final pad name.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4032>
Pads are activated automatically when they are added if the element
state is >=PAUSED, so it's not necessary to activate them manually
anymore.
This patch removes manual pad activation from gstaggregator, gstconcat,
gstfunnel, and gstinputselector.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3636>
Setting force_live lets aggregator behave as if it had at least one of
its sinks connected to a live source, which should let us get rid of the
fake live test source hack that is probably present in dozens of
applications by now.
+ Expose API for subclasses to set and get force_live
+ Expose force-live properties in GstVideoAggregator and GstAudioAggregator
+ Adds a simple test
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3008>
Introduce a new API that can return a GstTypeFind * with helper functions
and data set around buffer data.
While at it, drop factory field from GstTypeFindBufHelper. While it was
useful for logging, it was not passed through function arguments and keeping
it for logging would require an additional API increasing the API surface
and making it harder to use.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3296>
The purpose of a deep buffer copy is to be able to release the source
buffer and all its dependencies. Attaching the parent buffer meta to
the newly created deep copy needlessly keeps holding a reference to the
parent buffer.
The issue this solves is the fact you need to allocate more
buffers, as you have free buffers being held for no reason. In the good
cases it will use more memory, in the bad case it will stall your
pipeline (since codecs often need a minimum number of buffers to
actually work).
Fixes#283
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/2928>
And also don't assert that there are no buffers queued up when handling
an EOS event. The pad's streaming thread might've already received a new
stream-start event and queued up a buffer in the meantime.
This still leaves a race condition where the srcpad task sees all pads
in EOS state and finishes the stream, while shortly afterwards a pad
might receive a stream-start event again, but this doesn't seem to be
solveable with the current aggregator design.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/2769>
Otherwise setting the srcpad caps based on the sinkpad caps event will
already push a segment event downstream before the upstream segment is
known.
If the upstream segments are just forwarded when the upstream segment
event arrives this would result in two segment events being sent
downstream, of which the first one will usually be simply wrong.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/2372>
When the GAP event was flagged with MISSING_DATA, subclasses
may want to adopt a different behaviour, for example by repeating
the last buffer.
As we turn these gap events into gap buffers, we need to flag
those, we do so with a new custom meta.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/708>
GLib guarantees libintl is always present, using proxy-libintl as
last resort. There is no need to mock gettex API any more.
This fix static build on Windows because G_INTL_STATIC_COMPILATION must
be defined before including libintl.h, and glib does it for us as part
as including glib.h.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/2028>
They are part of gst_dep already and we have to make sure to always have
gst_dep. The order in dependencies matters, because it is also the order
in which Meson will set -I args. We want gstreamer's config.h to take
precedence over glib's private config.h when it's a subproject.
While at it, remove useless fallback args for gmodule/gio dependencies,
only gstreamer core needs it.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/2031>
There's no need to do this, and it can make seeking far less accurate.
For a specific use case: I am working with a long (45-minute) MPEG-1 layer 3 file, which has a constant bit rate but no seeking tables. Trying to seek the pipeline immediately after pausing it, without the ACCURATE flag, to a location 41 minutes in, yields a location that is potentially over ten seconds ahead of where it should be. This patch improves that drastically.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/374>
Those will cause us to renegotiate at the next aggregate cycle,
and while at that point we may decide to reconfigure upstream
branches (in practice we don't as this is inherently racy,
and that's the reason why mixer subclasses perform conversion
internally), we certainly don't want to just forward the event
willy-nilly to all our sinkpads.
An actual issue this is fixing is when caps downstream of a
compositor are changed at every samples-selected signal emission,
for the purpose of interpolating the output geometry, and the
compositor has a non-zero latency, the reconfigure events were
forwarded to basesrc, which triggered an allocation query, which
in turn caused aggregator to have to drain (thus not being able
to queue <latency> frames), leading to disastrous effects
(choppy output as compositor couldn't consume frames fast enough,
the higher the latency the choppier the output)
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/1464>