When g_option_context_parse fails, context and error variables are not getting free'd
which results in memory leaks. Free'ing the same.
And replacing g_error_free with g_clear_error, which checks if the error being passed
is not NULL and sets the variable to NULL on free'ing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753851
gst-indent used to support gnuindent and indent as executable names.
However, on OSX one can "brew install gnu-indent" and then the
executable name will be gindent. Added support for that.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750351
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.
Don't print all the different pad functions, it's just
confusing and no one has ever needed to know this for
anything ever anyway, it's just useless information.
Besides, we also label the default implementations as
'custom' implementations (the code that tries to
prevent that doesn't actually work it seems).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736377
GLib in git will spew a g_warning() when a property marked as
deprecated via param spec flags is accessed. Suppress this by
setting the appropriate environment variable.
If the toplevel bin is not not a pipeline, we place the bin in a
pipeline. Also make sure that we connect to the deep-notify of this new
pipeline because we will g_signal_handler_disconnect() from it later.
It's considered a programming error in recent GLib versions now.
We may already have removed the source by returning FALSE from
the callback if it was fired. Fixes warning with newer GLibs
when interrupting a pipeline with Control-C.
As long as the scripts' filenames are different, and the _gst_inspect
and _gst_launch functions are named differently, the completion scripts
for GStreamer 1.0 and 0.10 can be installed side-by-side in
/etc/bash_completion.d.
On my 0.10 branch† the completion script is renamed to
"gstreamer-completion-0.10" and the functions are renamed to
"_gst_inspect_0_10" and "_gst_launch_0_10". The remaining helper
functions should remain identical (the command-line interface to
gst-inspect hasn't changed, nor has the format of the gst-launch
pipeline), so it doesn't matter if the 1.0 script overrides the 0.10
script's definitions.
Note that I don't expect there to be another GStreamer 0.10 release, so
the 0.10 completion script will probably never be officially released;
but it is still worthwhile allowing both scripts to be installed
alongside each other, for those who install the 0.10 completion script
manually.
Fixes: #690515
† https://github.com/drothlis/gstreamer/blob/bash-completion-0.10/tools/gstreamer-completion-0.10
Bash 3's completion doesn't split words by characters in
COMP_WORDBREAKS. In particular it doesn't split at "=" signs. Now
_gst_launch_parse handles both bash 3 and 4 format of COMP_WORDS.
Note that "${cur%%=*}" means cur's value with the longest possible match
of "=*" deleted from the end; "${cur#*=}" means cur's value with the
shortest possible match of "*=" deleted from the beginning. See
http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Shell-Parameter-Expansion.html
Regardless of the version of bash running the unit tests, I can test for
both behaviours because the unit test populates COMP_WORDS manually. So
this tests the bash 3 behaviour:
test_gst_inspect_completion --gst-debug-level=4
and this tests the bash 4 behaviour:
test_gst_inspect_completion --gst-debug-level = 4
Compatible with bash 3.2; doesn't require the bash-completion package at
all (though the easiest way to install this script is still to install
bash-completion, and then drop this script into /etc/bash_completion.d).
Note that bash 3 doesn't break COMP_WORDS according to characters in
COMP_WORDBREAKS, so "property=val" looks like a single word, so this
won't complete property values (on bash 3). Similarly,
"--gst-debug-level=<TAB>" won't complete properly (on bash 3), but
"--gst-debug-level <TAB>" will.
For that reason, I now offer "--gst-debug-level" etc as completions
instead of "--gst-debug-level=".
Functions "_init_completion" and "_parse_help" were provided by the
bash-completion package >= 2.0; now I roll my own equivalent of
"_parse_help", and instead of "_init_completion" I use
"_get_comp_words_by_ref" which is available from bash-completion 1.2
onwards. If the bash-completion package isn't available at all I use
bash's raw facilities, at the expense of not completing properly when
the cursor is in the middle of a word.
The builtin "compopt" doesn't exist in bash 3; those users will just
have to live with the inconvenience of "property=" completing to
"property= " with a trailing space. Property values aren't completed
properly anyway on bash 3 (see above).
"[[ -v var ]]" to test whether a variable is set, also doesn't exist in
bash 3. Neither does ";;&" to fall through in a "case" statement.
In the unit tests:
* On my system (OS X), "#!/bin/bash" is bash 3.2, whereas
"#!/usr/bin/env bash" is the 4.2 version I built myself.
* I have to initialise array variables like "expected=()", or bash 3
treats "+=" as appending to an array already populated with one empty
string.
Completes options like "--gst-debug-level" and the values of some of
those options; completes gst-launch pipeline element names, property
names, and even property values (for enum or boolean properties only).
Doesn't complete all caps specifications, nor element names specified
earlier in the pipeline with "name=...".
The GStreamer version number is hard-coded into the completion script:
This patch is off the master branch and has the version hard-coded as
"1.0"; it needs to be updated if backported to the 0.10 branch. You
could always create a "gstreamer-completion.in" that has the appropriate
version inserted by "configure", but I'd rather not do that. The
hard-coded version is consistent with the previous implementation of
gstreamer-completion, which had the registry path hard-coded as
~/.gstreamer-1.0/registry.xml.
Note that GStreamer 0.10 installs "gst-inspect" and "gst-inspect-0.10".
"gst-inspect --help" only prints 4 flags (--help, --print, --gst-mm,
gst-list-mm) whereas "gst-inspect-0.10 --help-all" prints the full list
of flags. The same applies to "gst-launch" and "gst-launch-0.10".
GStreamer 1.0 only installs "gst-inspect-1.0", not "gst-inspect".
Requires bash 4; only tested with bash 4.2. Requires "bash-completion"
(which you install with your system's package manager).
Put this in /etc/bash_completion.d/ or in `pkg-config
--variable=compatdir bash-completion`, where it will be loaded at the
beginning of every new terminal session;
or in `pgk-config --variable=completionsdir bash-completion`, renamed to
match the name of the command it completes (e.g. "gst-launch-1.0", with
an additional symlink named "gst-inspect-1.0"), where it will be
autoloaded when needed.
test-gstreamer-completion.sh is (for now) in tests/misc -- it might be
worth creating "tests/check/tools", with all the necessary automake
boilerplate, and moving test-gstreamer-completion.sh there, and have it
run automatically with "make check".
IF YOU'RE NEW TO BASH COMPLETION SCRIPTS
----------------------------------------
"complete -F _gst_launch gst-launch-1.0" means that bash will run the
function "_gst_launch" to generate possible completions for the command
"gst-launch-1.0".
"_gst_launch" must return the possible completions in the array variable
COMPREPLY. (Note on bash syntax: "V=(a b c)" assigns three elements to
the array "V").
"compgen" prints a list of possible completions to standard output. Try
it:
compgen -W "abc1 abc2 def" -- "a"
compgen -f -- "/"
The last argument is the word currently being completed; compgen uses it
to filter out the non-matching completions. We put "--" first, in case
the word currently being completed starts with "-" or "--", so that it
isn't treated as a flag to compgen.
For the documentation of COMP_WORDS, COMP_CWORD, etc see
http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Bash-Variables.html#index-COMP_005fCWORD-180
See also:
* http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Programmable-Completion.html
* http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Programmable-Completion-Builtins.html
The bash-completion package provides the helper function
"_init_completion" which populates variables "cur", "prev", and "words".
See
http://anonscm.debian.org/gitweb/?p=bash-completion/bash-completion.git;a=blob;f=bash_completion;h=870811b4;hb=HEAD#l634
Note that by default, bash appends a space to the completed word. When
the completion is "property=" we don't want a trailing space; calling
"compopt -o nospace" modifies the currently-executing completion
accordingly. See
http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/Programmable-Completion-Builtins.html#index-compopt
The original registry was in xml format (~/.gstreamer-*/registry.xml). A
binary registry format was added in 2007 (commit ebf0c9d3) and made the
default in 2008 (commit 3f39fd7e). In 0.10 you could still choose at
"configure" time to use the xml registry instead; in 1.0 the binary
registry is your only choice.
This change to gstreamer-completion should work with either format
because it parses the output of "gst-inspect" instead of reading the
registry file directly.
Note that _gst_launch no longer needs an explicit "return 0" because,
unlike the previous grep command, compgen always returns 0 (unless a
genuine error occurs).
Just like the previous implementation by David Schleef, this "only
completes names of features, but that's 90% of what I want it for."
Wait for all PROGRESS messages (if any) to complete before going to the PLAYING
state. This is the only way we can wait for live elements to complete their
operations.
This is interesting for elements like rtspsrc that do some asynchronous network
requests as part of going to the PAUSED state. It could be possible that it, for
example, provides a clock and then we would like to wait until it completes
so that we can use the provided clock when going to PLAYING.
When we receive a buffering message of 100% in the paused state, we exit
the event_loop and move to the PLAYING state. What should happen is that
we wait for both ASYNC-DONE and 100% buffering before continueing.
Current implementation uses a traditional signal handler and a 250ms
timeout callback in the event loop. Adding a GSource with
g_unix_signal_add() to the GMainLoop is a much more elegant solution.
The signal handler with this approach can send a message to the bus
directly rather than set a flag as all dispatching intricacies are handled
by GLib.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693481
Fix up default location of the registry.
Mention more options for GST_DEBUG (wildcards and
named debug levels).
Explain what to do with the dot files that can be
produced by setting GST_DEBUG_DUMP_DOT_DIR.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693607
Remove GST_MAJORMINOR and replace it by GST_API_VERSION
Also set GST_VERSION_{MAJOR,MINOR,MICRO,NANO} explicitely
now.
All versions are at 1.0.0 now for the release soon but
API/ABI can still change until the 1.0.0 release.
Next release versions until 1.0.0 will be 0.10.9X and
these will be release candidates. GST_VERSION_* will
nonetheless stay at 1.0.0.0.
gst-launch.c: In function ‘print_toc_entry’:
gst-launch.c:446:3: error: the size of array ‘spc’ can’t be evaluated [-Werror=vla]
gst-launch.c:446:3: error: variable-sized object may not be initialized
Remove trace, we use debug log for that
Make alloc trace simpler, removing some methods.
Activate alloc trace with a GST_TRACE=3 environment variable.
Dump leaked objects atexit.
Provide an offset in the object where the GType can be found so that more
verbose info can be given for objects.
Remove -T option from gst-launch because tracing is now triggered with the
environment variable.
There are many good use cases for GstIndex and we want
to add it back again in some form, but possibly not with
the current API, which is very powerful (maybe too powerful),
but also a bit confusing. At the very least we'd need to
make the API bindings-friendly.
Remove the getcaps function on the pad and use the CAPS query for
the same effect.
Add PROXY_CAPS to the pad flags. This instructs the default caps event and query
handlers to pass on the CAPS related queries and events. This simplifies a lot
of elements that passtrough caps negotiation.
Make two utility functions to proxy caps queries and aggregate the result. Needs
to use the pad forward function instead later.
Make the _query_peer_ utility functions use the gst_pad_peer_query() function to
make sure the probes are emited properly.
Instead of printing separate 'Current' and 'Default' values
(the former obtained via g_object_get() and the latter from
the property GParamSpec), simply print the Current value as
the Default value. This is the right thing to do for almost
all elements and avoids confusion if a subclass of a base
class chooses a different default than the base class.
The fixate caps function was not used externally and we have vmethods in the
base classes where it is needed.
Update some docs.
simplify some fixate functions in the base classes. Also pass the untruncated
caps to the vmethod.
The unversioned tool wrappers are confusing and annoying for packagers,
users and developers alike. A gst-launch pipeline that works in 0.10
will likely not work in 0.11 (e.g. because elements or properties get
renamed, or syntax changes). The unversioned tools also yield useless
results when used with gdb or valgrind. Packagers need to co-ordinate
the packaging of all major versions to make sure there are no conflicts
when both try to install the same files. When two major versions are
in use (e.g. 0.10 and 0.11/1.0), it may be unclear (when looking at
things on IRC/pastebin/mailing list etc.) which version is actually
being used when there are unversioned wrappers. For all these reasons,
it seems best to just remove them for now.
Remove SIGUSR* handling from gst-launch, since it might interfere
with other things (e.g. libleaks), and should be done differently
anyway (either via support for simple timed-commands scripting or
remote control via DBus or so).