The matrices were converting the wrong values with non-diagonal-only matrices.
e.g. a typical yflip matrix in [-1,1]^3 such as
1 0 0 0
0 -1 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 0 0 1
Would have actually required a matrix like this in [0,1]^3
1 0 0 0
0 -1 0 0
0 0 1 0
0 -2 0 1
Which is
1. not consistent with our multiplication convention and would require
transposing matrices or changing our multiplication order (from what is
generally used on opengl matrix guides/tutorials).
2. Produces incorrect values when input with actual vertices accounting for
the difference in multiplication order. e.g. some vertices multiplied by
the yflip matrix using vertex * yflip(== transpose(yflip) * vertex):
vertex: -> result: expected:
vec4(1,0,1,1) -> vec4(1,-2,1,1) vec4(1,1,1,1)
vec4(1,1,1,1) -> vec4(1,-3,1,1) vec4(1,0,1,1)
With the updated values, we now get the expected values.
Includes a test for this behaviour and the example above
Also yield common options to the outer project (gst-build in our case)
so that they don't have to be set manually and use array types for some
options.
When frames are dropped or reordered then the serialized events are
collected and pushed with the next frame. This test verifies that the
order is preserved.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=794192
The default implementation for packet loss handling previously
always sent a gap event.
While this is correct as long as we know the packet that was
lost was actually a media packet, with ULPFEC this becomes
a bit more complicated, as we do not know whether the packet
that was lost was a FEC packet, in which case it is better
to not actually send any gap events in the default implementation.
Some payloaders can be more clever about, for example VP8 can
use the picture-id, and the M and S bits to determine whether
the missing packet was inside an encoded frame or outside,
and thus whether if it was a media packet or a FEC packet,
which is why ulpfecdec still lets these lost events go through,
though stripping them of their seqnum, and appending a new
"might-have-been-fec" field to them.
This is all a bit terrible, but necessary to have ULPFEC
integrate properly with the rest of our RTP stack.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=794909
As we load that symbol dynamically, valgrind gets confused
when it leaks and reports the leak against an unrelated library
and an unknown (??) symbol.
To address that, put the loading and calling of that symbol
in a separate function, and ignore any malloc leak happening
in that function.
test_negotiation would occasionally time out, for unknown reasons.
Simplify the test setup and get rid of the main loop, busses, and
notify signals. With this I can no longer easily reproduce the
timeout. Fingers crossed.
We can either receive an element that is floating or not and need to
accomodate that in the signal return values. Do so by removing the
floating flag.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792597
It does not timeout anymore, even though it's a very slow test. For the
context, this test runs routines for a fixes amount of time and prints
the throughput. Which means the test takes more time everytime a pixel
format is added. If that becomes a problem again, we should disable the
benchmarks by default.
Need to add gio-unix-2.0 dep to pipelines/tcp test otherwise it
won't find the gio/gunixfdmessage.h header which is not in the
same dir as the other gio headers. This issue was masked before
because we didn't include config.h so HAVE_GIO_UNIX_2_0
wasn't defined.
In many cases the unistd.h includes weren't actually needed.
Don't build tests that need it on windows with MSVC
(multifdsink, multisocketsink, pipelines/tcp).
Preparation for making tests work on Windows with MSVC.
Some GL platforms (EGL, WGL) require deactivating the OpenGL context in
one thread before it can be used in another thread which this test
currently violates and would e.g. result in EGL_BAD_ACCESS errors from
gst_gl_context_activate().
Fix by moving the object creation into the GL thread instead and not
requiring additional gst_gl_context_activate() calls.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=792158
If timestamp goes forwards more than allowed, we consider that the
timestamp belongs to the previous counting, so the extended timestamp
is unwrapped.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=783443