As was done for the base video decoder in commit 695675, don't
flush out the decoder on a new SEGMENT event. Segment events
may be a new segment, but are also often segment updates for
the current segment where the old data should be kept. For new
segments, a STREAM_START event will already trigger a drain, but
make sure to flush any remaining partial data then as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734666
With most decoder libraries, and especially when accessing codecs via
OpenMAX or similar APIs, we don't have the ability to properly related
the output buffers to a number of input samples. And could e.g. get
a fractional number of input buffers decoded at a time.
Previously this would in the end lead to an error message and stopped
playback. Change it to a warning message instead and try to handle it
gracefully. In theory the subclass can now get timestamp tracking
wrong if it completely misuses the API, but if on average it behaves
correct (and gst-omx and others do) it will continue to work properly.
Also add a test for the new behaviour.
We don't change it in the encoder yet as that requires more internal logic
changes AFAIU and I'm not aware of a case where this was a problem so far.
We were returning in various places without unreffing the caps, and
we were also leaking (overwriting) the caps we got from _get_current_caps()
Spotted by Haakon Sporsheim in #gstreamer
For default caps generation when handling gap events that are sent
before any buffer, try to use caps that are closer to what upstream
provided to avoid fixating rate or channels to 1 as default.
So there are the steps:
1) Try to set rate, channels and channel-mask from upstream if provided
2) Fixate the rate and channels to the default rate and channels from
audio lib
3) Fixate the caps just to be sure everything is fixed
4) If no channel-mask was provided and channels > 2, use a default
channel-mask (taken from audioconvert code)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722144
Before trying to generate a default fixated caps when handling a gap
event, make sure that the same strategy that is used when handling
a buffer has been attempted. Otherwise audiodecoder will ignore
upstream caps settings such as rate and channels and will likely
end with a caps with channels=1 and rate=1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722144
If there are no caps from the audio decoder when handling a GAP
event - as when one is received right at the start on a DVD without
initial audio - then choose any default caps for downstream and
then send the GAP, so the audio sink has a configured format in
which to start the ringbuffer.
Also, make the audio sink reject a GAP without caps with a clearer
error message.
Fixes bug https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=603921
So that it avoids to send an allocation query twice.
One from an early call to gst_audio_encoder_negotiate from a
subclass, then one from gst_audio_encoder_allocate_output_buffer.
Which means that previously gst_audio_encoder_negotiate was not
clearing the GST_PAD_FLAG_NEED_RECONFIGURE even on success.
Fixes bug https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719684
Raise an error in case no frames are decoded before EOS and we
have input, meaning that data was received but it was somehow invalid.
Based on the videodecoder change, merged here for consistency.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711094
Allows using -1 to make audiodecoder never post an error message
after decoding errors.
Based on the videodecoder change, merged here for consistency.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711094
This avoids triggering plenty of extra code/methods/overhead downstream when
we can just quickly check whenever we want to set caps whether they are
identical or not
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=706600
We have no way of tell the caller of the exact error (e.g. if we're flushing),
so will have to wait until the caller uses API that returns a GstFlowReturn,
for example when pushing this buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700006
Clamp timestamp interpollation to 0 to avoid going negative. This should not
happen, really, but until the interpolation is improved this seems better.
Sometimes the decoder would use the allocator for something else than just
allocating output buffers, for example, querying different parameters.
This patch expose a getter accessor for the negotiated memory allocator.