They're fully additive so there's no point in building with default
features too.
For the non-sys bindings we might want to consider building with default
features though.
More often than not both need to be modified in sync and they share the
gir-files subdirectory anyway. As such it's easier to keep them inside
the same repository.
It might just be constructed or might be finalized currently and it's
not safe to use any APIs on it.
Instead provide a small wrapper type that allows to get the underlying
pointer and that implements the Display trait to print the name of the
object.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer-rs/-/issues/287
- `PartialOrd` was returning `true` for expressions such as
- `ClockTime::none() < ClockTime::from_seconds(1)`.
- `ClockTime::from_seconds(1) > ClockTime::none()`.
- Remove `Ord` because `ClockTime` is not a total order due to
`ClockTime::none()`. See test `not_ord`.
This also applies to others `Format(Option<{u32,u64}>)` types.
When "{:?}" printing a Message[Ref], the following issues lower the
experience:
- If the Message seqnum is GST_SEQNUM_INVALID (0), a panic occurs due
to an assertion failure in MessageRef::get_seqnum.
- The src of the Message displays the GString address.
Origin issue for an occurrence of the first case above fixed in
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-base/-/merge_requests/860
There is now a separate type for Single and Periodic clock ids. This
allows to have API that is only for one type on that specific type
instead of doing runtime checks, and allows for more refined async
waiting API.
Crates using gst_plugin_define might not (need to) import `glib`
directly into their scope; use the one imported in `gstreamer`s root
to make this macro more portable.
Besides, `glib` is prefixed with `$crate::` just below.