Except for gst/gl/gstglfuncs.h
It is up to the client app to include these headers.
It is coherent with the fact that gstreamer-gl.pc does not
require any egl.pc/gles.pc. I.e. it is the responsability
of the app to search these headers within its build setup.
For example gstreamer-vaapi includes explicitly EGL/egl.h
and search for it in its configure.ac.
For example with this patch, if an app includes the headers
gst/gl/egl/gstglcontext_egl.h
gst/gl/egl/gstgldisplay_egl.h
gst/gl/egl/gstglmemoryegl.h
it will *no longer* automatically include EGL/egl.h and GLES2/gl2.h.
Which is good because the app might want to use the gstgl api only
without the need to bother about gl headers.
Also added a test: cd tests/check && make libs/gstglheaders.check
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784779
Scenario:
A manifest starts out in live mode but then the recording is finalized
and a subsequent update changes the state to a non-live manifest when
the server has finished recording/transcoding/whatever with the full
list of fragments.
Without this patch, the manifest update task is never stopped on the
live->non-live transition and will busy loop, burning through one CPU
core.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786275
This is useful for autoplay for example. With autoplay, it is necessary to
wait until the scene graph is fully set up. This signal is emitted once the
QML item node is ready. So, inside a connected slot, the pipeline's state
can be set to PLAYING to automatically start playback as soon as the QML
script is loaded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786246
OpenJPEG 2.2 has some API changes and thus ships its headers in a new
include path. Add a configure check (to both meson and autoconf) to
detect the newer version of OpenJPEG and add conditional includes.
Fix the autoconf test for OpenJPEG 2.1, which checked for HAVE_OPENJPEG,
which was always set even for 2.0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786250
Make a bunch of symbols private that are currently leaked
accidentally because they have a gst_* prefix and are used
internally. We mark those we can't make static with
G_GNUC_INTERNAL so that they get hidden with the autotools
build as well (although we could just pass -fvisibility=hidden
there too).
Otherwise we will get it again later for output, however this frame will
never actually be output so we will shift timestamps.
This is especially bad if we're handling a live stream where the first
frames are not keyframes. We would output the keyframe with the
timestamp of the first frame, and everything would be too late when
arriving in the sink.
The goal here is to minimize the work needed to bring all images
to a common format. A better criteria than the number of pads
with a given format is the number of pixels with a given format.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786078