The minimum latency is the latency we have to wait at least
to guarantee that all upstreams have produced data. The maximum
latency has no meaning like that and shouldn't be used for waiting.
When iterating sink pads to collect some data, we should take the stream lock so
we don't get stale data and possibly deadlock because of that. This fixes
a definitive deadlock in _wait_and_check() that manifests with high max
latencies in a live pipeline, and fixes other possible race conditions.
Segment start needs only to be updated when starting the streams
or after a seek, doing it during bitrate changes will cause the
running time to go discontinuous (jump back to a previous ts)
and QOS will drop buffers
This simplifies the code and also makes sure that we don't forget to check all
conditions for waiting.
Also fix a potential deadlock caused by not checking if we're actually still
running before starting to wait.
Actually we should always recalculate buffer size since our buffer size
even when not-padded is smaller for many sub-sampled formats. This is
because we don't add padding between the planes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740900
Problem was that if buffer was mapped READWRITE (state of buffers from
libav right now), mapping it READ/GL will not upload. This is because the
flag is only set when the buffer is unmapped. We can fix this by setting
the flags in map. This result in already mapped buffer that get mapped
to be read in GL will be uploaded. The problem is that if the write
mapper makes modification afterward, the modification will never get
uploaded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740900
When this is TRUE, we really have to produce output. This happens
in live mixing mode when we have to output something for the current
time, no matter if we have enough input or not.
This removes the uses of GAsyncQueue and replaces it with explicit
GMutex, GCond and wakeup count which is used for the non-live case.
For live pipelines, the aggregator waits on the clock until either
data arrives on all sink pads or the expected output buffer time
arrives plus the timeout/latency at which time, the subclass
produces a buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741146
To avoid race conditions with gst_task_stop(); gst_task_join() with
another thread doing gst_task_pause(), the joining thread would be
waiting for the task to stop but it would never happen. So just
use gst_task_stop() everywhere to prevent more mutexes
Check if the stream is live before checking if it is EOS as a live
stream might be considered EOS when it just needs to wait for a manifest
update to proceed with the next fragments