Timestamps should start at the segment start, rather than 0, so
we need to not subtract the first timestamp. This makes the sink
correctly account for running time when switching PMTs where a
stream starts not quite at zero, causing timing offsets that can
become noticeable and causing dropped frames after a few times.
A new program object is created to replace an existing one
in the programs hash table, so its refcount needs to match.
With the default of 0 refcount on creation, the next PAT
change will cause that refcount to be both incremented and
decremented (assuming the new PAT references that stream too),
which will cause the program to be destroyed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748412
When all fragments have already been downloaded on a live stream
dashdemux would busy loop as the default implementation of
has_next_fragment would return TRUE. Implement it to correctly
signal if adaptivedemux should wait for the manifest update before
trying to get new fragments.
When updating the manifest the timestamps on it might have changed a little
due to rounding and timescale conversions. If the change makes the timestamp
of the current segment to go up it makes dashdemux reposition to the previous
one causing one extra unnecessary download.
So when repositioning add an extra 10 microseconds to cover for that rounding
issues and increase the chance of falling in the same segment.
Additionally, also improve the time used when the client is already after the
last segment. Instead of using the last segment starting timestamp use the
final timestamp to make it reposition to the next one and not to the one that
has already been downloaded.
These functions of directly getting and setting segment indexes
are no longer useful as now we need 2 indexes: repeat and segment
index.
The only operations needed are advance_segment, going back to the
first one or seeking for a timestamp.
Segments are now stored with their repeat counts instead of spanding
them to multiple segments. This caused advancing to the next segment
using a single index to have to iterate over the whole list every time.
This commit addresses this by storing both the segment index as well
as the repeat index and makes advancing to next segment just an
increment of the repeat or the segment index.
Use a single segment to represent it internally to avoid using too
much memory. This has the drawback of issuing a linear search to
find the correct segment to play but this can be fixed by using
binary searches or caching the current position and just looking
for the next one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748369
On fedora 22, the output of cpp inserts extra debug comments, which
makes our regexp for the faad2 version check fail. This in turn causes
it to compile with the wrong arguments passed which then causes stack
corruption and crashes.
Fix this by only checking for the version (which should be by itself on
a single line). This is potentially less safe, it might be possible that
a similar string would appear in a later version in the header file.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748571
In the H263 spec, CPFMT is present only if the use of a custom
picture format is signalled in PLUSEPTYPE and UFEP is "001",
so we need to check params->format and only if the value is
6 (custom source format) the CPFMT should be read, otherwise
it's not present and wrong data will be parsed.
When reading the CPFMT, the width and height were not
calculated correctly (wrong bitmask).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org//show_bug.cgi?id=749253
Rather than one of the input pad video info's.
The test checking this was not constraining the output frame size
to ensure that the out of frame stream was not being displayed.
The custom code is wrong as it ignores the templates, which leads to
missing fields in the result. Instead, simply use the default get_caps
implementation which does it correctly (get the template, intersect
with filter and return).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749237
Without this, we will fixate weird pixel-aspect-ratios like 1/2147483647. But
in the end, all the negotiation code in videoaggregator needs a big cleanup
and videoaggregator needs to get rid of the software-mixer specific things
everywhere.
Unless stopRequest is set, we should unlock conditionally -- otherwise,
the 'create:' method can wake up to an empty buffer queue
and pull a nil buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748054