By using the clocksync inside the dtlssrtpenc, all streams inside a
bundled are synchronized together. This will cause problems if their
buffers are not already arriving synchronized: clocksync would wait for
a buffer on one stream and then buffers from the other stream(s) with
lower timestamps would all be sent out too late.
Placing the clocksync before the rtpbin and rtpfunnel synchronizes each
stream individually and they will be send out more smoothly as a result.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/2355>
Found while working on GStreamer-rs documentation, some enums had this
bit of text pasted verbatim in the enum documentation rather than
attached to the enum-variant. Fortunately it seems these in WebRTC and
D3D11 are the only ones matching the non-@-prefixed pattern:
^ \* GST_\w+:\s*\w+
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/2118>
As advised by !1366#note_629558 , the nice transport should be
accessed through:
> transceiver->sender/receiver->transport/rtcp_transport->icetransport
All the objects on the path can be accessed through properties
except sender/receiver->transport. This patch addresses that.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1952>
Instead of synchronising at the ICE transport, do clock sync for the
RTP stream at the DTLS transport via the dtlssrtpenc rtp-sync
property. This avoids delaying RTCP while waiting until it is time
to output an RTP packet when rtcp-mux is enabled.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/issues/1212
By passing NULL to `g_signal_new` instead of a marshaller, GLib will
actually internally optimize the signal (if the marshaller is available
in GLib itself) by also setting the valist marshaller. This makes the
signal emission a bit more performant than the regular marshalling,
which still needs to box into `GValue` and call libffi in case of a
generic marshaller.
Note that for custom marshallers, one would use
`g_signal_set_va_marshaller()` with the valist marshaller instead.
Limitations:
- No transport changes at all (ICE, DTLS)
- Codec changes are untested and probably don't work
- Stream removal doesn't remove transports (i.e. non-bundled transports
will stay around until webrtcbin is shutdown)
- Unified Plan SDP only. No Plan-B support.
This is the equivalent of iceTransportPolicy in the RTCConfiguration
dictionary.
Only two values are implemented:
* all: default behaviour
* relay: only gather relay candidates
The third member of the iceTransportPolicy enum, "public", is
obsolete.
For each lib we build export its own API in headers when we're
building it, otherwise import the API from the headers.
This fixes linker warnings on Windows when building with MSVC.
The problem was that we had defined all GST_*_API decorators
unconditionally to GST_EXPORT. This was intentional and only
supposed to be temporary, but caused linker warnings because
we tell the linker that we want to export all symbols even
those from externall DLLs, and when the linker notices that
they were in external DLLS and not present locally it warns.
What we need to do when building each library is: export
the library's own symbols and import all other symbols. To
this end we define e.g. BUILDING_GST_FOO and then we define
the GST_FOO_API decorator either to export or to import
symbols depending on whether BUILDING_GST_FOO is set or not.
That way external users of each library API automatically
get the import.
While we're at it, add new GST_API_EXPORT in config.h and use
that for GST_*_API decorators instead of GST_EXPORT.
The right export define depends on the toolchain and whether
we're using -fvisibility=hidden or not, so it's better to set it
to the right thing directly than hard-coding a compiler whitelist
in the public header.
We put the export define into config.h instead of passing it via the
command line to the compiler because it might contain spaces and brackets
and in the autotools scenario we'd have to pass that through multiple
layers of plumbing and Makefile/shell escaping and we're just not going
to be *that* lucky.
The export define is only used if we're compiling our lib, not by external
users of the lib headers, so it's not a problem to put it into config.h
Also, this means all .c files of libs need to include config.h
to get the export marker defined, so fix up a few that didn't
include config.h.
This commit depends on a common submodule commit that makes gst-glib-gen.mak
add an #include "config.h" to generated enum/marshal .c files for the
autotools build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797185