Asks the subclass for a potential time offset to apply to each
separate stream, in dash streams can have "presentation time offsets",
which can be different for each stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745455
Chaining a downstream pool would lead to two owner of the same
pool. In dynamic pipeline, if one owner is removed from the pipeline
the pool will be stopped, and the rest of the pipeline will fail
since the pool will now be flushing. Also fix proposed pool caching,
filter->pool was never set, never unrefed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745705
In case the original caps were missing some optional fields like
interlace-mode. We assume default values for those everywhere,
but they can still cause negotiation to fail if a downstream element
expects the field to be there and at a specific value.
Otherwise the pipeline stalls when running
more than one glimagesink with gst-launch.
Also only register the custom nsapp loop
when setting up the nsapp from gstgl.
We also need to recalculate the offset, since otherwise the frame
mapping will be forward two lines in the U and V planes (I420) due
to gst_video_info_align() round up the Y plane to a even number of
lines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745054
Make sure we support offset and video alignment when downloading too.
This is currently not used (plane_start is always 0), but it makes
the code correct if we want to use that later.
Provide the right size to GL when uploading. Using maxsize is wrong
since we offset the data point with the memory offset and video
alignement offset.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
When the memory is partial copy, the texture size and videoinfo no
longer make sense. As we cannot guess what the application wants, we
safely copy into a sysmem memory.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
This implements support for GstAllocationParams and memory alignments.
The parameters where simply ignored which could lead to crash on
certain platform when used with libav and no luck.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
When trying to render buffers with meta:GLTextureUpload the glimagesink crashes
with a segmentation fault.
This patch workarounds this crash setting to NULL the method implementation
after free.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745206
When setting a new window handle, we need to ensure all implementations
will detect the change.
For that we deactivate the context before setting the window handle, then
reactivate the context
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745090
When (re)activating the context, the backing window handle might have changed.
If that happened, destroy the previous surface and create a new one
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745090
Causes the following warning on clang:
gst-dvb-section.c:567:36: error: format specifies type 'unsigned long' but the argument has type 'int' [-Werror,-Wformat]
descriptors_loop_length, end - 4 - data);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This fix a very slow rendering rate regression that only
happens when using gst-launch, i.e. in the case where
the main thread does not run any NSApp loop.
Git bisect reported it has been introduced by the commit
e10d2417e2:
"move to CGL and CAOpenGLLayer for rendering".
Then the commit 7d46357627:
"gstglwindow_cocoa: fix slow render rate" attempted to fix
the slow rendering rate problem when using gst-launch.
At least for me it does not work. I tried several
combinations, for example to flush CA transactions in the
custom app loop, as mentioned in the doc, but the only solution
that fixes the slow rendering is by reducing the loop latency.
From what I tested, no need to put less than 60ms, even if the
framerate has an interval much lower (16.6ms for 60 fps).
Anytime else, we have no idea how to match up map and unmaps.
We also don't know exactly how the calling code is using us.
Also fixes the case where we're trying to transfer while someone else
is accessing our data pointer or texture resulting in mismatched video
frames.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744839
One has to use the src_lock anyway to protect the min/max/live so they
can be notified atomically to the src thread to wake it up on changes,
such as property changes. So no point in having a second lock.
Also, the object lock was being held across a call to
GST_ELEMENT_WARNING, guaranteeing a deadlock.
While gst_aggregator_iterate_sinkpads() makes sure that every pad is only
visited once, even when the iterator has to resync, this is not all we have
to do for querying the latency. When the iterator resyncs we actually have
to query all pads for the latency again and forget our previous results. It
might have happened that a pad was removed, which influenced the result of
the latency query.
It was between another function and its helper function before, which was
confusing when reading the code as it had nothing to do with the other
functions.