Everyone running an uninstalled git setup is going to wonder about
this failure next time they update, so let's mention the solution
in the error message.
Reflow the code to move error handling to the end of the functions. Initialize
gvalue like we do in the setter. Add a unit-test module with two simple tests
the catche this bug.
We don't need the hold the proxy mutex locked for getting the internal pad and
for linking the new target pad when we retarget. So take the lock a little later
and release it earlier.
Fixes#596366
Guard against a hostile child process that sends bogus data
due to memory corruption by adding a magic number to each packet,
and limit the maximum size of any message to 32MB
When trying to find a function plugin-scanner, include a check on the
version of the binary registry chunks it sends, to make sure it's
what we understand.
Add a simple version check when starting the plugin-scanner so we can
verify we're talking to one that talks the same language.
First try a plugin-scanner in the installed path, then try one via the
GST_PLUGIN_SCANNER env var if that doesn't work.
Update the uninstalled script.
Install the plugin-scanner to the libexec dir
When updating the registry, we don't need to re-read the registry cache
and waste time replacing all our existing, hopefully identical, plugins
and features that we're about to re-scan anyway.
phase 2 - make the plugin loader receive the list of plugins to load and
send back the results asynchronously, so we don't context switch back
and forth so much.
The structure_change message was originally emitted on source pads and
then recently changed to be sink pads. This causes a failure in the
gst-python testsuite. Disable the restriction so that the published
behaviour is still allowed.
Also parse the nano of the version and assume that X.Y.Z-1.1 >= X.Y.Z
With this change we can also check development versions against the version of
the upcomming release.
This is available in newer gcc releases and it should only exist
on platforms that provide some native 128bit integer arithmetic
instructions.
The x86-64 assembly for this is still kept for non-gcc compilers
that don't provide __uint128_t magic.
Post the structure change messages on the sinkpads of the elements. This allows
us to catch unlinked pads earlier without ending up with inconsistent element
degrees.
When we detect a pad unlink in progress, we will not be updating the degree of
the parent element. This can cause false loop detected warnings because the
degree counter is invalid. Handle this case by marking the iterator as 'dirty'
when we detect a pad unlink and avoid emiting the warning in this case. We have
to continue our state change as good as we can, we will eventually resync when
the pad unlink completed.
When an element is added to the bin, only set the index if we have a
cached index, rather than setting a NULL index on elements that might
have a default index object of their own.
elementfactory field is filled in by gst_element_base_class_init,
but it needs some info set on the element's type, so have it
available prior to class structure creation spinning up.
This affects elements that have a well-known/public type (e.g. pipeline)
and can be created by other means than gst_element_factory_make
(which will also fill in the element's factory).
Cache the last index that was set with _set_index() and return this in the
_get_index() call.
Set the cached index on newly added elements.
Fixes#566881
Based on clock implementation by Håvard Graff <havard.graff@tandberg.com>
Try to get the time on windows using the performance counters. These have a much
higher resolution and accuracy than the regular getcurrenttime(). Be careful to
fall back to regular getcurrenttime() or posix clocks when performance counters
are not available.
We can use a shift for scaling the denominator instead of a divide since the
denom is always positive. This avoids having the compiler generate code for the
different rounding rules when scaling negative values.
64bit x86 has native 64x64->128 bit multiply that we can use with some inline
assembler to speed up large multiplications.
Use bsr to find the number of leading zeros more efficiently.
The internal links function is deprecated since some time and
there already were GST_REMOVE_DEPRECATED markers in the source file,
now add them to the header too.
Fixes bug #592209.
Before the signal handler would get the ghostpad passed as second
argument but it could've already been unreffed and destroyed.
This would then lead to crashes and all that.
Now we get the ghostpad from the proxy pad, which we get from the
target pad as it's peer.
Fixes bug #591318.
The new functions are
gst_util_uint64_scale_int_round()
gst_util_uint64_scale_int_ceil()
gst_util_uint64_scale_round()
gst_util_uint64_scale_ceil()
Fixes bug #590919.
Before it returned that [start,stop] is inside the segment and that the
difference between segment_start and start needs to be clipped. If the
clipping is done on a buffer (like in baseaudiosink) this will result
in the data pointer being at a invalid memory position.
Fixes bug #589849.
Check for metadata writability when setting caps on buffer or when copying
metadata flags. Only enable these extra assertions in git versions.
This should help us find bad elements.
Often we don't need the result of the intersection. Add a variant that only
tries to intersect. It can break out earlier and does less GValue copying.
API: gst_caps_can_intersect()
The "album artist" tag is used when the artist of an entire
album differs from the artist of an individual track; for example,
when a "guest artist" appears on an album, or on compilations.
Fixes bug #590430.
GstTaks does not always unref the taskpool it was created from because it
depends on when the pool provided an ID for joining the task.
Rework some code so that we always unref the pool and optionally join when the
pool provided an id.
Fixes#589127
For now, don't show a g_warning() for empty tag strings and NULL
tags with non-git versions; we should wait for the fixes in our
plugin modules to make it into a release before we enable this
unconditionally.
Add a quick return if two types are the same. Change the check for the
intersection function to be the same as the one used in intersect(). The
later tries both directions.
Don't forbid the empty string "" in generic structures, only in taglists.
Properly allow the NULL string by adding special cases for serialising
and deserialising it. prop1=(string)NULL is the NULL string,
prop1=(string)"NULL" is the actual string with the value "NULL"
Add a new macro GST_DEBUG_CATEGORY_GET to get a log category by name. This
allows plugins to use e.g. core categories like PERFORMANCE or CLOCK.
API: GST_DEBUG_CATEGORY_GET
This makes the generated code faster since:
* It won't have to read an undirect value (which will most likely be
outside of the L1/L2 cache)
* We know that value never changes (the compiler has no clue that it doesn't).
It is not too obvious that getting and releasing request pads is not entierly
symetrical regarding to the pad refcount. Add a note about that to the docs.
This might deserve a FIXME-0.11 too.
Just in case someone who clearly can't be deterred by any number of leading
underscores uses this very private but still somewhat documented symbol
directly in their code (*cough* qtdemux *cough*).
Add new method to iterate a bufferlist without having to allocate an iterator.
Add convenience method for getting an item from the list based on the group and
index.
Remove redundant _do_data callback and method.
Update unit-tests and add some more for the new methods.
Add functions to create a new tag list and set tags in one go, which
is nice for use in combination with functions that take ownership of
the taglist, such as gst_event_new_tag() or gst_element_found_tags().
API: add gst_tag_list_new_full()
API: add gst_tag_list_new_full_valist()
Update design doc with step-start docs.
Add eos field to step done message
when stepping in reverse, update the segment time field.
Flush out the current step when we are flushing.
Small micro-optimisation: look up value table for fundamental types
via an array dedicated to fundamental types instead of going through
a hash table lookup. Since there can be only 255 fundamental types,
the table size/efficiency trade-off should be acceptable, esp. since
the most commonly-used types are all fundamental types. The size of
the table could probably be minimised further if needed by allocating
the table dynamically and only expanding it on demand.
GTypes are not ints and as such are not guaranteed to fit into an int
(with the exception of fundamental types), so we really shouldn't put
them into int variables. Even if a rather unlikely obscure corner case,
this has actually been a problem at some point in the past, see commit
99f16655f4.