It may be necessary for some signalling clients but the source element
doesn't need to depend on it.
Also, the value will fall back to the pad's MSID for the first argument
to the request-encoded-filter gobject signal when it isn't available
from the signalling client.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1477>
This change addresses a cosmetic issue with livekit, where the
connection quality indicator seen by other users shows bad quality
unless the track is added with a high quality layer. The details of the
layer submitted aren't significant for this purpose.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1443>
In the signaller clients and servers, the following sequence is used to close
the websocket (in the [send task]):
```rust
ws_sink.send(WsMessage::Close(None)).await?;
ws_sink.close().await?;
```
tungstenite's [`WebSocket::close()` doc] states:
> Calling this function is the same as calling `write(Message::Close(..))``
So we might think they are redundant and either could be used for this purpose
(`send()` calls `write()`, then `flush()`).
The result is actually is bit different as `write()` starts by checking the
state of the connection and [returns `SendAfterClosing`] if the socket is no
longer active, which is the case when a closing request has been received from
the peer via a [call to `do_close()`]). Note that `do_close()` also enqueues a
`Close` frame.
This behaviour is visible from the server's logs:
```
1. tungstenite::protocol: Received close frame: None
2. tungstenite::protocol: Replying to close with Frame { header: FrameHeader { .., opcode: Control(Close), .. }, payload: [] }
3. gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: Received message Ok(Close(None))
4. gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: connection closed: None this_id=cb13892f-b4d5-4d59-95e2-b3873a7bd319
5. remove_peer{peer_id="cb13892f-b4d5-4d59-95e2-b3873a7bd319"}: gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: close time.busy=285µs time.idle=55.5µs
6. async_tungstenite: websocket start_send error: WebSocket protocol error: Sending after closing is not allowed
```
1: The server's websocket receives the peer's `Close(None)`.
2: `do_close()` enqueues a `Close` frame.
3: The incoming `Close(None)` is handled by the server.
4 & 5: perform session closing.
6: `ws_sink.send(WsMessage::Close(None))` attempts to `write()` while the ws
is no longer active. The error causes an early return, which means that
the enqueued `Close` frame is not flushed.
Depending on the peer's shutdown sequence, this can result in the following
error, which can bubble up as a `Message` on the application's bus:
```
ERROR: from element /GstPipeline:pipeline0/GstWebRTCSrc:webrtcsrc0: GStreamer encountered a general stream error.
Additional debug info:
net/webrtc/src/webrtcsrc/imp.rs(625): gstrswebrtc::webrtcsrc:👿:BaseWebRTCSrc::connect_signaller::{{closure}}::{{closure}} (): /GstPipeline:pipeline0/GstWebRTCSrc:webrtcsrc0:
Signalling error: Error receiving: WebSocket protocol error: Connection reset without closing handshake
```
On the other hand, [`close()` ensures the ws is active] before attempting to
write a `Close` frame. If it's not, it only flushes the stream.
Thus, when we want to be able to close the websocket and/or to honor the closing
handshake in response to the peer `Close` message, the `ws_sink.close()`
variant is preferable.
This can be verified in the resulting server's logs:
```
tungstenite::protocol: Received close frame: None
tungstenite::protocol: Replying to close with Frame { header: FrameHeader { is_final: true, rsv1: false, rsv2: false, rsv3: false, opcode: Control(Close), mask: None}, payload: [] }
gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: Received message Ok(Close(None))
gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: connection closed: None this_id=192ed7ff-3b9d-45c5-be66-872cbe67d190
remove_peer{peer_id="192ed7ff-3b9d-45c5-be66-872cbe67d190"}: gst_plugin_webrtc_signalling::server: close time.busy=22.7µs time.idle=37.4µs
tungstenite::protocol: Sending pong/close
```
We now get the notification `Sending pong/close` (the closing handshake) instead
of `websocket start_send error` from step 6 with previous variant.
The `Connection reset without closing handshake` was not observed after this
change.
[send task]: 63b568f4a0/net/webrtc/signalling/src/server/mod.rs (L165)
[`WebSocket::close()` doc]: https://docs.rs/tungstenite/0.21.0/tungstenite/protocol/struct.WebSocket.html#method.close
[returns `SendAfterClosing`]: 85463b264e/src/protocol/mod.rs (L437)
[call to `do_close()`]: 85463b264e/src/protocol/mod.rs (L601)
[`close()` ensures the ws is active]: 85463b264e/src/protocol/mod.rs (L531)
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1435>
webrtcbin will refuse pad requests for all sorts of reasons, and should
be logging an error when doing so, simply post an error message and let
the application deal with it, the reason for the refusal should
hopefully be available in the logs to the user.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1399>
Implement new signaller WhipServerSignaller
- an http server using 'warp'
- handlers for the POST, OPTIONS, PATCH and DELETE
- fixed path `/whip/endpoint` as the URI
- fixed value 'whip-client' as the producer peer id
- fixed resource url `/whip/resource/whip-client`
Derive whipserversrc element from BaseWebRTCSrc
- implement constructed method for ObjectImpl to set
non-default signaller, i.e., WhipServerSignaller
- bind the properties stun-server and turn-servers to those on
the Signaller
Connect to 'webrtcbin-ready' signal in the constructor of WhipServerSignaller
- it will be emitted by the webrtcsrc when the webrtcbin element is ready
- the closure for this signal will in turn connect to webrtcbin's ice-gathering-state
and perform send with the answer sdp via the channel
- the WhipServer will hold its HTTP response in POST handler until this signal
is received or timeout which happens early
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1284>
add a new signal webrtcbin-ready in this place doing same
thing but can be used for both consumers and producers
Please note this change is only to the consumer-added
signal on the signaller interface.
The consumer-added signal on the webrtcsink is unchanged
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-rs/-/merge_requests/1284>