Large scale skip is an optimization, and thus it is safer to
stop skipping than to continue. Clear skip on segments and
discontinuities, as these are points where it is possible that
the original idea of "bytes to skip" changes.
Allows buffers to be reclaimed when caps is to be renegotiated so
that bufferpools can be stopped. As the allocation query is
serialized all buffers have been already drained from the pipeline,
except this last_sample one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=682770
Use gst_buffer_copy_deep() to force the copy of the underlying
memory instead of possibly doing a shallow copy of the buffer
and just referencing the memory
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745287
Based on patch from Song Bing <b06498@freescale.com>
Don't just set the need_preroll flag to TRUE in all cases. When we
are already prerolled it needs to be set to FALSE and when we go to
READY we should not touch it. We should only set it to TRUE in other
cases, like what the code above does.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736655
Both for the peer filter caps and the converted caps based on the peer caps.
If the peer filter caps are EMPTY, the peer caps query will also return
EMPTY. There's no ned to both downstream/upstream with this query.
When using a negative rate (rate being segment.rate * segment.applied_rate),
we will end up reporting decreasing positions, therefore adjust the clamping
against last reported value accordingly.
Fixes positions getting properly reported with applied_rate < 0.0
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738092
TRUE is 1, but every other non-zero value is also considered true. Comparing
for equality with TRUE would only consider 1 but not the others.
Also normalize booleans in a few places.
Instead of checking if our outcaps are equivalent to the previous incaps, and
if that is the case not setting any caps on the pad... compare against our
previous outcaps because that's what we care about.
Fixes some cases where the outcaps became equivalent to the previous incaps,
but the previous outcaps were different and we were then sending buffers
downstream that were corresponding to the caps we forgot to set on the pad.
Resulting in crashes or image corruption.
Currently we are just returning FALSE, but we do have the information
we should just answer the query the same way as when answering through
the GstElement.query vmethod default implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739580
Fixes 'Attempt to unlock mutex that was not locked'
warning with newer GLibs when sink is shut down in
certain situations. Triggered by the decodebin
test_reuse_without_decoders unit test in -base
sometimes, esp. on slower machines.
Add a first_buffer boolean state flag to have baseparse do actions
before pushing data. This is used to check the caps for streamheader
buffers that are prepended to the stream, but only if the first buffer
isn't already marked with the _HEADER flag. In this case, it is assumed
that the _HEADER marked buffer is the same as the streamheader.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735070
Adds API to get or peek a sub-reader of a certain size from
a given byte reader. This is useful when parsing nested chunks,
one can easily get a byte reader for a sub-chunk and make
sure one never reads beyond the sub-chunk boundary.
API: gst_byte_reader_peek_sub_reader()
API: gst_byte_reader_get_sub_reader()
Just remove one skip annotation that causes this:
** (g-ir-compiler:12458): ERROR **: Caught NULL node, parent=empty
with older g-i versions such as 1.32.1.