It's an external which lives in gstcheck.c. Redeclaring it makes some
compilers/architectures think the 'buffers' in the individual tests are
a different symbol... and therefore we end up comparing holodecks with
oranges.
Create output caps from input caps, so we maintain any fields we
might get on the input caps, such as codec_data or rate and channels.
Set channels and rate on the output caps if we don't have input caps
or they don't contain such fields. We do this partly because we can,
but also because some muxers need this information. Tagreadbin will
also be happy about this.
Original commit message from CVS:
* tests/check/Makefile.am:
* tests/check/elements/aacparse.c:
* tests/check/elements/amrparse.c:
Add unit tests for new parsers.
Images might have framerate=0/1 in the caps, which caused an
assertion on deinterlace. I don't know of interlaced image formats
but deinterlace might be hardcoded on some generic pipelines and
it shouldn't assert.
The fix was to set field_duration to 0 if the input has a framerate
with a 0 numerator.
This patch also adds checks for this situation on the unit tests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641400
First bring down everything to NULL before attempting to unlink
or unref anything.
Avoids the tests just hanging there for ever waiting to acquire a
lock that doesn't exist anymore.
If setting the pipeline to PLAYING before issuing the seek, buffers
are already arriving at the sink before the seek is handled and
will have the wrong timestamps and everything.
Fixes bug #625547.
So matroska's Block structure has no keyframe flag, only the SimpleBlock has it.
To detect keyframes in Blocks, it is just the BlockGroup container that needs
to have a ReferenceBlock attached if it is a delta frame in video.
deinterlace now always adds the interlaced field to the output caps,
if it wasn't present in the input caps the output caps will still
contain interlaced=false.
It's an external which lives in gstcheck.c. Redeclaring it makes some
compilers/architectures think the 'buffers' in the individual tests are
a different symbol... and therefore we end up comparing holodecks with
oranges.
Now the alpha is multiplied with the already existing alpha
value instead of simply ignoring it and the luma/chroma values
are kept, even if the output is 100% transparent.