The current documentation is controverse, while it states that the
returned value is valid only while the query is is valid, which presumes
a 'transfer none' policy. But the tooltip for the 'out' annotation
states the default is 'transfer-full'.
Add the missing 'transfer none' annotations to fix this.
Tweak the documentation slightly to clarify that the estimated-total in
a a Buffering query the total remaining time of a download, not the
total time for the complete download. Also indicate the unit used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704934
If all stream-start messages had a group id (for backwards compatibility),
we only consider a stream started if all had the same group id.
In 2.0 we should make the group id mandatory.
All streams that have the same group id are supposed to be played
together, i.e. all streams inside a container file should have the
same group id but different stream ids. The group id should change
each time the stream is started, resulting in different group ids
each time a file is played for example.
This makes sure that no bin misses the clock-lost messages, independent
of the state, and could return an old, non-working clock from
gst_bin_provide_clock_func().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701997
Fixes compiler warnings such as
gstallocator.c:61:8: error: conflicting types for 'gst_memory_alignment'
../gst/gstallocator.h:52:18: note: previous declaration of 'gst_memory_alignment' was here
Renegotiation and reconfiguration will fail because all queries
and events won't be accepted by the pad if it's flushing. In the
best case this just causes unneeded work and spurious warnings in
the debug logs, in the worst case it causes elements to fail completely.
When appending/prepending tags, avoid re-creating (and copying) lists if we already
have one and instead just append/prepend the GValue to the list.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702545
Before this patch gst_init would intercept --help, causing for example
cheese's --help to look like this:
[hans@shalem cheese]$ cheese --help
Usage:
cheese [OPTION...] - GStreamer initialization
Help Options:
-h, --help Show help options
--help-all Show all help options
--help-gst Show GStreamer Options
gst_init is the only gfoo_init function which does this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702089
API: gst_value_array_append_and_take_value
API: gst_value_list_append_and_take_value
We were already using this internally, this makes it public for code
which frequently appends values which are expensive to copy (like
structures, arrays, caps, ...).
Avoids copies of the values for users. The passed GValue will also
be 0-memset'ed for re-use.
New users can replace this kind of code:
gst_value_*_append_value(mycontainer, &myvalue);
g_value_unset(&myvalue);
by:
gst_value_*_append_and_take_value(mycontainer, &myvalue);
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701632
But do this only for events that are not dropped by flushing,
i.e. do it only for everything except SEGMENT and EOS.
Without this we might drop a CAPS event if flushing happens
at an unfortunate time and nobody is resending the CAPS event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700806
If a pad block was triggered from sending a sticky event downstream, it
could happen that the pad block is relinking pads, which then requires
to resend previous sticky events.
Previous patch was inforcing a complete ordering of the sticky events, while
in fact, only STREAM_START, CAPS and SEGMENT events need proper ordering.
See: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688188
We can prevent buggy element from causing other elements to fail or crash
by sorting sticky event at insertion. In this case, we also warn as this
is not supposed to happen.
See: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688188