The seqh buffer allocated in qtdemux_parse_svq3_stsd_data() needs to
be freed by the caller after use.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777157
Signed-off-by: Andre McCurdy <armccurdy@gmail.com>
If a fragmented stream doesn't have a tfdt, don't
reset the output timestamps at each fragment boundary
by erroneously using the default value of 0. Introduced
by commit 69fc48
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754230
Majorly change the way that splitmuxsink collects
incoming data and sends it to the output, so that it
makes all decisions about when / where to split files
on the input side.
Use separate queues for each stream, so they can be
grown individually and kept as small as possible.
This removes raciness I observed where sometimes
some data would end up put in a different output file
over multiple runs with the same input.
Also fixes hangs with input queues getting full
and causing muxing to stall out.
Add a new signal for formatting the filename, which receives
a GstSample containing the first buffer from the reference
stream that will be muxed into that file.
Useful for creating filenames that are based on the
running time or other attributes of the buffer.
To make it work, opening of files and setting filenames is
now deferred until there is some data to write to it,
which also requires some changes to how async state changes
and gap events are handled.
When performing a key-unit seek, always snap to the start ts
of the keyframe buffer we landed on so that the keyframe is
entirely within the resulting outgoing segment. That seems
the most sensible result, since the user requested snapping
to the keyframe position.
Segments times and seek requests are stored and handled
in raw 'PTS' time, without the cslg_shift - which only applies
to outgoing samples. Omit the cslg_shift portion when
extracting PTS to compare for internal seek snaps.
If the cslg_shift is included, then keyframe+snap-before seeks
generate a segment start/stop time that already includes the
cslg_shift, and it's then added a 2nd time, causing the
first buffer(s) to have timestamps that are out of segment.
Remove an old check from atom_stsc_add_new_entry() that
extends the last entry in the STSC if the samples per chunk
matches, as the new interleave merging logic requires that
the final entry by updateable. There's already code
below which simply merges the final entry into the previous
one when needed, so rely on that instead.
Fixes asserts like:
ERROR:atoms.c:2940:atom_stsc_update_entry: assertion failed:
(atom_array_index (&stsc->entries, len - 1).first_chunk == first_chunk)
Make sure the state of the parser is set to
collecting streams before chaining up to the
parent change_state() method, to close a
small window that can cause playback to
never commence.
Use GQueue instead of a GSList so we don't have to traverse
the whole list to append something every time. And it also
keeps track of the number of items in it for us.
Add a function to add filenames to the list of old files and
use it in more places, so that memory doesn't build up in
other modes either if no max_files limit is specified.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766991
Technically we weren't leaking the memory, just storing it internally
and never using it until the element is freed. But we'd still use more
and more memory over time, so this is not good over longer periods
of time. Only keep track of files if there's actually a limit set,
so that we will prune the list from time to time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766991
Previously, seeking to position y where y is (strictly) within a keyframe
would seek to that keyframe both with SNAP_BEFORE and SNAP_AFTER,
where the latter is now adjusted to really snap to the next keyframe.
Rather amazingly (and equally unnoticed), keyunit seeking resulted in segments
where start != time (which is bogus for simple avi timeline). So, properly
adjust the segment (start) rather than fiddling with segment time (only).
... by using the original seek event's flags rather than the corresponding
segment flags, which do not have such counterpart flags (and
do no longer have them covertly sneaking in nowadays).
With Xiph codecs the stream header buffers are both in the caps and are
usually also at the beginning of each input stream, but it's perfectly
possible that the input stream does not have the stream header buffers
inline in the data. Matroskamux would drop the first N buffers assuming
they're stream headers, but this meant it would drop actual payload data
when the stream didn't contain the stream headers inline. Fix this by
only dropping leading buffers if they're flagged as stream headers. This
fixes issues with streams that are being tapped into after streaming
has started.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749098
That is, whenever we go through start/stop we have to ensure that on the
next opportunity the buffers are reallocated again. Otherwise the
buffers might be NULL because the element was reused with the same
configuration as before (i.e. set_caps() wouldn't have reinited the
buffers).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775898
Redirect on PLAY wasn't doing the necessary session cleanup. Fixed by
removing code from gst_rtspsrc_send that changed the state varable upon
encountering a redirect. Better to let the redirect handlers in
gst_rtspsrc_retrieve_sdp and gst_rtspsrc_play do their own
state-dependent cleanup.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775543
When providing items with a seqnum, there is a (very small) probability
that an element with the same seqnum already exists. Don't forget
to free that item if it wasn't inserted.
And avoid returning undefined values when dealing with duplicate items