Timestamps in MPEG-TS streams are based on the last timestamp
before the start code of the picture. GstBaseParse sets the
timestamp based on the beginning of the sequence header, if
one exists before the picture. This fixes the case where the
timestamp occurs in the MPEG-TS stream between the seq header
and picture start code.
Otherwise we will intersect with the srcpad template caps and add all the caps fields
that the parser will ever set, no matter if downstream restricts this field or not.
This requires upstream to set this field on the caps to successfully negotiate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690184
This allows filtering out videos for hardware decoders that do not
support GMC at all or only support a limited number of sprite warping
points (usually 1).
Right now decodebin will concider the pad template caps as fixed and if a decoder
has restriction on for example height/width it won't be autoplugged because
gst_caps_is_subset fails as those fields are missing from the pad template caps.
We fix the issue here making sure that the pad caps are fixed using data from
the stream.
Sometimes the codec_data buffer for simple/main pushed by asfdemux is 5 bytes
instead of 4. When that happens, codec_data is still valid but it seems to have
one 0x00 trailing byte. Might be a bug in the demuxer, needs more investigation.
All these formats have re-ordered PTS which the base class gets
wrong. It's better to leave them blank and let the decoder sort it
out. Better yet would be to track and interpolate the timestamps
in the subclasses (FIXME)
Change the way the pixel-aspect-ratio is computed by
interpreting the sequence header aspect ratio info
as MPEG-1 values until a sequence extension or
sequence display extension is seen, and then updating
the sequence header struct accordingly.
Fixes incorrect anamorphic display on some MPEG-2 (DVD)
sequences.
Anonymous union is an ISO C (2011) feature that is not exposed in
compilers strictly conforming to the previous standard.
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
When there is no extension header, the repeat_count variable is left to 0 and
then the duration on the output buffers is calculated wrongly. Because the
duration is used to interpolate output timestamps, the output timestamps are
also wrong, causing bad framerates.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681535
They should take the filter caps into account and always return
the template caps appended to the actual caps. Otherwise the
parsers stop to accept unparsed streams where upstream does not
know about width, height, etc.
Fixes bug #677401.