docs: application-development: Clarify usage of static elements

Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-docs/-/issues/41

Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7859>
This commit is contained in:
Zeno Endemann 2019-08-02 18:17:20 +02:00 committed by GStreamer Marge Bot
parent 96d762c6eb
commit 7112f1b874

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@ -15,19 +15,33 @@ framework. In this section, we will solely discuss how to embed such
elements statically in your application. This can be useful for
application-specific elements that have no use elsewhere in GStreamer.
Elements do not need to be registered to be used in GStreamer, so one
can simply instantiate the elements with `g_object_new ()` and use them
in pipelines like any other.
If the statically linked elements should also be available through a
name for functions such as `gst_element_factory_make ()`, these elements
can be registered direclty without a plugin. For that you can use
`gst_element_register ()` with `NULL` as plugin parameter.
While these two methods are usually sufficient, it is also possible
to register a static plugin.
### Static plugins
Dynamically loaded plugins contain a structure that's defined using
`GST_PLUGIN_DEFINE ()`. This structure is loaded when the plugin is
loaded by the GStreamer core. The structure contains an initialization
function (usually called `plugin_init`) that will be called right after
that. It's purpose is to register the elements provided by the plugin
with the GStreamer framework. If you want to embed elements directly in
your application, the only thing you need to do is to replace
`GST_PLUGIN_DEFINE ()` with a call to `gst_plugin_register_static ()`.
As soon as you call `gst_plugin_register_static ()`, the elements will
from then on be available like any other element, without them having to
be dynamically loadable libraries. In the example below, you would be
able to call `gst_element_factory_make
("my-element-name", "some-name")` to create an instance of the element.
with the GStreamer framework. To register a static plugin, the only
thing you need to do is to replace `GST_PLUGIN_DEFINE ()` with a call
to `gst_plugin_register_static ()`. As soon as you call
`gst_plugin_register_static ()`, the elements will from then on be
available like any other element, without them having to be dynamically
loadable libraries. In the example below, you would be able to call
`gst_element_factory_make("my-element-name", "some-name")` to create
an instance of the element.
``` c