The FLV header cannot be trusted to indicate video or
audio presence, as the comments already mention. Don't
delay pushing tags waiting for streams that might never
appear.
Tags are now pushed immediately after they change:
- After parsing an onMetaData script object
- After negotiating caps on a pad
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768440
In other words, gst_pad_get_current_caps should never return NULL
in a pad-added callback from the demuxer.
Added tests for the two special cases with AAC and H.264 where this
would happen every time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763780
Remove calls to gst_pad_has_current_caps() which then go on to call
gst_pad_get_current_caps() as the caps can go to NULL in between. Instead just
use gst_pad_get_current_caps() and check for NULL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759539
One-line removal of tags_written++
This should fix rtmp output to crtmpserver, and hopefully
noone is expecting that the element count includes the end
element, as different bits of documentation say different
things about whether it should or not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661624
Apparently the Microsoft Azure RTMP server requires that the
videodatarate and audiodatarate metadata be provided, so
set those, even if it's to 0. Use the actual input bitrate
tags if available.
This is done by using new feature of the CollectPad clip function
which sets the DTS as a gint64 in the collected data. It also simplify
the code a bit.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740575
Previously we were setting new caps with the same content for every H264 or
AAC codec_data we found in the stream, spamming everything and causing
renegotiations.
Instead delay creating the caps until we read the codec_data from the stream,
or fail if we get normal data before the codec_data.
AAC raw caps and H264 avc caps always need codec_data, setting caps on the pad
without them is going to make negotiation fail most of the time. Even if we
later set new caps with the codec_data, that's usually going to be too late.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746682
FLV documentation stipulates that timestamp must start at zero.
In order to respect this rule, keep the first timestamp around
and offset the timestamp from this value. This allow for longer
recording time in presence of timestamp that does not start
at 0 already.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731352
The tags in FLV are DTS. In audio cases, and for many video format this makes
no difference, but for AVC with B-Frames, PTS need to be computed from
composition timestamp CTS, with PTS = DTS + CTS.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731352
Commit 2b9493b5 broke this in two ways: a) we should only
pass duration queries in TIME format upstream (or at least
not those in DEFAULT or BYTE format), and b) we mustn't
overwrite the default value of 'res' from TRUE to FALSE
and not set it again later. This led to bogus durations
being reported for FLV playback from file, because TIME
queries would fail (as 'res' had been set to FALSE) and
parsers then do a BYTE query as fallback and try to
guesstimate something in return, which of course goes
horribly wrong since the BYTE size returned is for the
muxed file.