Storing a 64 bit integer in a 32 bit integer and then checking
for the error cases might not be ideal.
error: comparison of constant -9223372036854775808 with
expression of type 'guint' (aka 'unsigned int') is always true
video time uses the 'segment' and the text time should use
the 'text_segment'.
If different segments are used for video and text it would
lead to out of sync video/subtitles.
* 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
Change the way autoplug-select is accumulated so that it's possible to have
multiple handlers. The handlers keep getting called as long as they keep
returning GST_AUTOPLUG_SELECT_TRY.
One practical example of when this is needed is when hooking into playbin's
uridecodebin, which is perhaps not very elegant but the only way to influence
which streams playbin autoplugs/exposes.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723096
Discussion on IRC indicated that the main reason for this list was to
prevent demuxers that can trigger a lot of seeking from using
progressive buffering using queue2 (which due to being seekable triggers
that behaviour).
However given that upstream can indicate seeks are possible but should
be avoided via a scheduling query, this extra whitelisting shouldn't be
necessary for well-behaved demuxers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704933
Make a little table of conversions and manually score them. Use this
info to define better weights for the scoring algorithm.
give separate scores for doing changes and the impact of the change,
This allows us to avoid conversion when we can but still allow fairly
lossless changes.
The old code did not penalize GRAY conversions, PAL conversions were
punished too low and depth conversions too high.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722656
We call the _get_time function from the provided clock and we don't lock
the sink object for performance reasons. Make sure we only read and
check variables once so that they don't change while we are executing
the code.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720661
Check that even if the subclass doesn't call set_output_format, the base
class should use upstream provided caps to fill the output caps that is
pushed before the gap event is forwarded, otherwise it ends again fixating
the rate and channels to 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722144
For default caps generation when handling gap events that are sent
before any buffer, try to use caps that are closer to what upstream
provided to avoid fixating rate or channels to 1 as default.
So there are the steps:
1) Try to set rate, channels and channel-mask from upstream if provided
2) Fixate the rate and channels to the default rate and channels from
audio lib
3) Fixate the caps just to be sure everything is fixed
4) If no channel-mask was provided and channels > 2, use a default
channel-mask (taken from audioconvert code)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722144
A xvcontext can be created early in gst_xvimagesink_set_window_handle().
In this case don't recreate, i.e. overwrite it in gst_xvimagesink_open().
Otherwise XEvents won't be handled in the xevent listener thread.
Fixes a regression when setting the window handle on the sink in
the very beginning before changing its state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715138
A change in gst_ogg_demux_do_seek caused oggdemux to wait for
a page for each of the streams, including a skeleton stream if
one was present. Since Skeleton only has header pages, that
was never going to end well.
Also, the code was skipping CMML streams when looking for pages,
so would also have broken on CMML streams.
Thus, we change the code to disregard Skeleton streams, as well
as discontinuous streams (such as CMML and Kate). While it may
be desirable to consider Kate streams too (in order to avoid
losing a subtitle starting near the seek point), this may be
a performance drag when seeking where no subtitles are. Maybe
one could add a "give up" threshold for such discontinuous
streams, so we'd get any page if there is one, but do not end
up reading preposterous amounts of data otherwise.
In any case, it is important that the code that determines
the amount of streams to look pages for remains consistent with
the "early out" conditions of the code that actually parses
the incoming pages, lest we never decrease the pending counter
to zero.
This fixes seeking on a file with a skeleton track reading all
the file on each seek.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719615
Ogg data is read chunk by chunk, and the chunk size used was
originally taken from libvorbisfile. However, this value leads
to poor performance when used on an Ogg file with large pages
(Ogg pages can be close to 64 KB).
We can't just use a larger chunk size, since this will decrease
performance on small page streams, so we use an adaptive scheme
where the chunk size is twice the largest page size we've seen
so far in the stream. For "typical" Ogg/Vorbis, this gives us
almost the same chunk size (a bit lower), and this lets us get
better performance on streams with large pages.