Otherwise ssrc changes via rtpsession's (deprecated!) internal-ssrc property
are not possible anymore. rtpsession was now patched to only suggest an ssrc
if it makes sense to do so.
In 2.0 we should get rid of all the properties that are also negotiated via
caps, the code and behaviour is too confusing otherwise.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749581
According to this section of the rfc.
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5506#section-3.4.2
The validation should be updated to accept more types of RTCP
packages, with this mask change feedback packages will be also
accepted.
Change-Id: If5ead59e03c7c60bbe45a9b09f3ff680e7fa4868
Micro-optimisation: if the buffer consist of just one memory, we
know we have already mapped that memory to read the headers, so
no need to map it another time to get to the payload data, we
can just set up the payload data details right there and then
and avoid another map call in gst_rtp_buffer_get_payload().
Adds up when receiving RTP-payloaded raw video which can easily
be thousands of packets per frame.
Implement a chain_list function, which avoids lots of locking
compared to the default fallback implementation in GstPad.
We may also want to do some more sophisticated timestamp
tracking here at some point, but for now leave it up to the
jitterbuffer and/or subclasses (in case buffers in the
buffer list have no timestamp set on them, there may only
be a timestamp for the whole list on the first buffer).
This provides the exact same behaviour as the default
fallback implementation.
This affects the pt, ssrc, seqnum-offset and timestamp-offset properties. If
they were set from a property, or we configured caps before, we try to use
that value for them. Even if the first structure of the downstream caps
specifies a different value, we check if the value is supported by other
structures.
Only if all this fails, we use the values given by downstream in the first
structure, i.e. if no properties were set and these are the first caps we
negotiate or downstream does not support our values.
By doing this we ensure that we don't spuriously change ssrcs or other fields
in the middle of the stream (and also consider property values more). Ssrc
changes would currently happen after sending an RTX packet (thus creating a
new internal source inside the rtpsession), and then renegotiating the
payloader (which then gets the RTX ssrc from rtpsession).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749581
When generating segment, we can't assume the first buffer is actually
the first expected one. If it's not, we need to adjust the segment to
start a bit before.
Additionally, we if don't know when the stream is suppose to have
started (no clock-base in caps), it means we need to keep everything in
running time and only rely on jitterbuffer to synchronize.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=635701
They are very confusing for people, and more often than not
also just not very accurate. Seeing 'last reviewed: 2005' in
your docs is not very confidence-inspiring. Let's just remove
those comments.
Previously the sequence number kept track of by GstRTPBasePayload would
only be set when going from READY to PAUSED state. This meant that a
downstream element that attempted to configure a basepayloader by
setting seqnum-offset e.g. in its sinkpad's caps template would have
trouble configuring the basepayloader. The reason was that the caps
event which arrives with the desired value for seqnum-offset did not
arrive at the basepayloader until caps negotiation took place,
significantly later than the transition from READY to PAUSED.
The result after this patch is that the default value for the
seqnum-offset property, or later set values for this property, will take
effect when going from READY to PAUSED like before. In addition the an
arriving caps event will also affect the basepayloaders configured
sequence number as the event arrives.
The payload type field in an RTP packet header is 7 bits wide, hence the
boundary values ought to be 0x00 and 0x7f, not the previously stated
values 0x00 and 0x80.
* Change running time type to guint64
* Use GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE() to check for invalid timestamps
* Name variables so ns-based and hz-based timestamps are evident
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719383
The payload type can't be between 72 and 76 because with the marker bit set,
this could be mistaken for an RTCP packet then. We do a relaxed check and
only refuse 72-76 when the marker bit is set. The effect is that when
we try to map an RTCP packet as an RTP packet, we will certainly fail.