This avoids ending up with plenty of pending data (since we'll only
try to parse/push one frame from the incoming buffer).
Fixes increasing memory consumption when parsers aren't linked
Previously only the last would be pushed, which would cause
invalid running times downstream. This also fixes the handling
of update newsegment events.
The segment start adjustment code in pull mode should never trigger
anymore because the bisection code earlier would have already made
sure that we're at the desired position.
Also move the gap handling some lines below after sending the currently
configured segments. Otherwise we might fill gaps in a segment that is
not configured downstream yet.
... since that is already handled by _update_duration, or should not be done
altogether if the duration is determined by non-estimated means.
Fixes#669502.
GstBaseParse was not clearing its adapter on reset causing
problems when a pipeline went for example from PLAYING to NULL
state and then back to PLAYING again. The data from the last
stream would be used in the parser.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=667444
Add private replacements for deprecated functions such as
g_mutex_new(), g_mutex_free(), g_cond_new() etc., mostly
to avoid the deprecation warnings. We can't change most of
these in 0.10 because they're part of our API and ABI.
Using gst_pad_proxy_get_caps() breaks backwards compatibility with old
parsers because it will propagate the other side's fields like "parsed"
and "framed" and also breaks parser/converters.
Fixes bug #664221.
API: GstBaseParseClass::detect()
This is called with the first buffers until the subclass has finished detection
and only afterwards the original buffers are handled as before. The vfunc allows
detection of the stream format without breaking the upstream framing.
Adds a getcaps function to the sink pad to make parsers propagate
downstream caps restrictions to upstream.
The pipeline "audiotestsrc num-buffers=100 ! faac ! aacparse !
"audio/mpeg, version=(int)4, stream-format=(string)adts" ! filesink"
wouldn't work because aacparse wouldn't propagate the adts restriction
upstream to faac.
This patch adds a default getcaps to the sink pad to simply proxy
downstream caps and also adds a 'get_sink_caps' function pointer
to GstBaseParseClass for subclasses that need more refined getcaps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661874
While some formats allow subclass to determine a specific subsequent
needed frame size, others may to need to scan for markers and can only
request 'additional data' by whatever reasonable available step.
In push mode, trying to minimize additional latency leads to step size
being the next input buffer. In pull mode, any reasonable step size
(such as already used by buffer caching) can be applied.
Protect index with its own lock. gst_index_get_writer_id() may take
the object lock internally (the default resolver, GST_INDEX_RESOLVER_PATH,
will anyway), so if we're using that to protect the index as well,
we'll deadlock.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=646811
Change semantics of gst_base_parse_push_frame() and make it take
ownership of the whole frame, not just the frame contents. This
is more in line with how gst_pad_push() etc. work. Just transfering
the content, but not the container of something that's not really
known to be a container is hard to annotate properly and probably
won't work. We mark frames allocated on the stack now with a private
flag in gst_base_parse_frame_init(), so gst_base_parse_frame_free()
only frees the contents in that case but not the frame struct itself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=518857
API: gst_base_parse_frame_new()
Seems like the best fit to what it does, and is shorter than
set_frame_properties() which might also have been confusing
because of GstBaseParseFrame.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=518857