The out-point, which is an internal time, is used instead of the
duration for determining the control binding value at the end of the
element.
Also, allow the user to switch off the auto-clamping of control sources
if they are not desired. And allow them to clamp specific control sources
individually.
Also, fix a lot of memory leaks related to control sources. In
particular, releasing the extra ref gained by source in
g_object_get (binding, "control-source", &source, NULL);
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-editing-services/-/merge_requests/177>
Allow the user to register a child property of a base effect as a time
property. This can be used by GES to correctly calculate the
duration-limit of a clip when it has time effects on it. The existing
ges_effect_class_register_rate_property is now used to automatically
register such time effects for rate effects.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-editing-services/-/merge_requests/177>
The property had been deprecated and is unused.
This property is not needed. Any internal time effect that an nleoperation
wraps is itself responsible for converting seek/segment timestamps.
Previously, the ghostpads were performing a rate conversion after the
rate element had already done so, essentially doubling their effect on
seeks and segment times. This was always unnecessary, but went unnoticed
by the tempochange test because it was using an identity element rather
than an actual rate-changing element.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-editing-services/-/merge_requests/160>
Instead of focusing on the instances of the clips and their children,
we relax the check to allow moving track element clip between clips
that share a common asset. This makes it as correct conceptually but
more flexible, and the code becomes simpler.
Only copy the properties that can be both read and written, and are not
construct only. Similarly for child properties when a track-element is
deep copied.
The way a clip's track elements are added to tracks was re-handled. This
doesn't affect the normal usage of a simple audio-video timeline, where
the tracks are added before any clips, but usage for multi-track
timelines has improved. The main changes are:
+ We can now handle a track being selected for more than one track,
including a full copy of their children properties and bindings.
(Previously broken.)
+ When a clip is split, we copy the new elements directly into the same
track, avoiding select-tracks-for-object.
+ When a clip is grouped or ungrouped, we avoid moving the elements to
or from tracks.
+ Added API to allow users to copy the core elements of a clip directly
into a track, complementing select-tracks-for-object.
+ Enforced the rule that a clip can only contain one core child in a
track, and all the non-core children must be added to tracks that
already contains a core child. This extends the previous condition
that two sources from the same clip should not be added to the same
track.
+ Made ges_track_add_element check that the newly added track element
does not break the configuration rules of the timeline.
+ When adding a track to a timeline, we only use
select-tracks-for-object to check whether track elements should be
added to the new track, not existing ones.
+ When removing a track from a timeline, we empty it of all the track
elements that are controlled by a clip. Thus, we ensure that a clip
only contains elements that are in the tracks of the same timeline, or
no track. Similarly, when removing a clip from a timeline.
+ We can now avoid unsupported timeline configurations when a layer is
added to a timeline, and already contains clips.
+ We can now avoid unsupported timeline configurations when a track is
added to a timeline, and the timeline already contains clips.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-editing-services/-/issues/84
Rename the private "owners" to "creators" to avoid confusing this with
the owner of the track element's memory.
Also made the ungroup method for GESClip symmetric by making all the
children of the resulting clips share their creators, which allows them
to be added to any of the other ungrouped clips. Once the clips are
grouped back together, the tracks loose these extra creators.
This means that we have all the information about the asset
when constructing the underlying GstElements.
This also allows to cleanup some code all around
And deprecate all GESTrackElement constructors, but the GESEffect one.
Those should **never** be created by users and should become internal
in the future.
Stop having docstring for the constructors that were internal.
The properties will only have their signal emitted when they change in
value, even when g_object_set, etc, methods are used.
The _set_start method already did this, but start was missing the
EXPLICIT_NOTIFY flag. There should be no need to check that the property
has changed in ->set_start or ->set_duration
Unless this property is set to TRUE, the in-point must be 0 and the
max-duration must be GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE.
Also added EXPLICIT_NOTIFY flags to the active and track-type
properties such that their notifies are emitted only if the property
changes, even when the g_object_set, etc, methods are used.
Also added a missing notify signal to the set_active method.
Only allow elements that were created by ges_clip_create_track_elements
(or copied from such an element) to be added to a clip. This prevents
users from adding arbitrary elements to a clip.
As an exception, a user can add GESBaseEffects to clips whose class
supports it, i.e. to a GESSourceClip and a GESBaseEffectClip.
This change also introduces a distinction between the core elements of a
clip (created by ges_clip_create_track_elements) and non-core elements
(currently, only GESBaseEffects, for some classes). In particular,
GESBaseEffectClip will now distinguish between its core elements and
effects added by the user. This means that the core elements will always
have the lowest priority, and will not be listed as top effects. This is
desirable because it brings the behaviour of GESBaseEffectClip in line
with other clip types.
Stop overwriting the ->list_children_properties virtual method in
subclasses because the timeline element class handles everything itself
anyway.
Note that containers already automatically add the children properties of
their child elements in ges_container_add.
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.
Setters return values should return %FALSE **only** when the value
could not be set, not when unchanged or when the subclass handled
it itself!
This patches makes it so the return value is meaningul by allowing
subclasses return anything different than `TRUE` or `FALSE` (convention
is -1) to let the subclass now that it took care of everything and
no signal should be emited.
Now that the notion of layer has been moved down to #GESTimelineElement
(through the new #ges_timeline_element_get_layer_priority method), this
method make much more sense directly in the base class.
This is implemented on top of a Tree that represents the whole timeline.
SourceClips can not fully overlap anymore and the tests have been
updated to take that into account. Some new tests were added to verify
that behaviour in greater details
Each timeline element is in a layer (potentially spanning
over several), it is very often useful to retrieve an element
layer priority (from an app perspective more than the element
priority itself as that is a bit of an implementation detail
in the end).
Port tests to it
Export GES library API in headers when we're building the
library itself, otherwise import the API from the headers.
This fixes linker warnings on Windows when building with MSVC.
Fix up some missing config.h includes when building the lib which
is needed to get the export api define from config.h
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-editing-services/issues/42
When setting a new control binding on a track element, the old control
binding (if any) is going to be removed. Make sure the
"control-binding-removed" signal is emitted in this case.
Fixes https://phabricator.freedesktop.org/T7340#95666
Reviewed-by: Thibault Saunier <thibault.saunier@collabora.com>
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.freedesktop.org/D1842
We set TrackElement track type very early when creating effects
so it now uses that information to find TrackElement in clips
by track type.
Reviewed-by: Alex Băluț <alexandru.balut@gmail.com>
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.freedesktop.org/D1370
Those are implemented with the exact same API at the GESTimelineElement
level now, and user of those APIs with high level languages will get the
exact same API.
Before this patch, NLE and GES did not support NleOperations (respectively
GESEffects) that changed the speed/tempo/rate at which the source plays. For
example, the 'pitch' element can make audio play faster or slower. In GES 1.5.90
and before, an NleOperation containing the pitch element to change the rate (or
tempo) would cause a pipeline state change to PAUSED after that stack; that has
been fixed in 1.5.91 (see #755012 [0]). But even then, in 1.5.91 and later,
NleComposition would send segment events to its NleSources assuming that one
source second is equal to one pipeline second. The resulting early EOS event
(in the case of a source rate higher than 1.0) would cause it to switch stacks
too early, causing confusion in the timeline and spectacularly messed up
output.
This patch fixes that by searching for rate-changing elements in
GESTrackElements such as GESEffects. If such rate-changing elements are found,
their final effect on the playing rate is stored in the corresponding NleObject
as the 'media duration factor', named like this because the 'media duration',
or source duration, of an NleObject can be computed by multiplying the duration
with the media duration factor of that object and its parents (this is called
the 'recursive media duration factor'). For example, a 4-second NleSource with
an NleOperation with a media duration factor of 2.0 will have an 8-second media
duration, which means that for playing 4 seconds in the pipeline, the seek
event sent to it must span 8 seconds of media. (So, the 'duration' of an
NleObject or GES object always refers to its duration in the timeline, not the
media duration.)
To summarize:
* Rate-changing elements are registered in the GESEffectClass (pitch::tempo and
pitch::rate are registered by default);
* GESTimelineElement is responsible for detecting rate-changing elements and
computing the media_duration_factor;
* GESTrackElement is responsible for storing the media_duration_factor in
NleObject;
* NleComposition is responsible for the recursive_media_duration_factor;
* The latter property finally fixes media time computations in NleObject.
NLE and GES tests are included.
[0] https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755012
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.freedesktop.org/D276
Read only properties will throw a GLib warning like this
when accessed with "set_child_property":
Warning: g_object_set_property: property 'text-x' of object class 'GstTextOverlay' is not writable
Avoiding all the pending_xx dance and making the code simpler.
This is now possible thanks to the various recent refactoring.
Thanks to that the user is able to set_child_property on objects
that are not in GESTrack yet, as expected.
Reviewed-by: Thibault Saunier <thibault.saunier@collabora.com>
Differential Revision: https://phabricator.freedesktop.org/D739