This is a tiny clarification as the storage was loosely named "storage".
This change clarify that the storage is specificaly used for received RTP
packets. This is unlike the storage found in rtprtxsend that stores a
backlog of sent RTP packets.
We recently added code to remove outdate NACK to avoid using bandwidth
for packet that have no chance of arriving on time. Though, this had a
side effect, which is that it was to get an early RTCP packet with no
feedback into it. This was pretty useless but also had a side effect,
which is that the RTX RTT value would never be updated. So we we stared
having late RTX request due to high RTT, we'd never manage to recover.
This fixes the regression by making sure we keep at least one NACK in
this situation. This is really light on the bandwidth and allow for
quick recover after the RTT have spiked higher then the jitterbuffer
capacity.
Right now, we may call on-new-ssrc after we have processed the first
RTP packet. This prevents properly configuring the source as some
property like "probation" are copied internally for use as a
decreasing counter. For this specific property, it prevents the
application from disabling probation on auxiliary sparse stream.
Probation is harmful on sparse streams since the probation algorithm
assume frequent and contiguous RTP packets.
This introduce a new signal on RTSession, on-sending-nacks is emited
right before the list of seqnums to be nacked are processed and
transformed into FB Nack. This allow implementing custom nacks
handling through another mechanism with APP feedback.
In order to do that, we now split the nacks registration from the actual
FB nack packet construction. We then try and add as many FB Nacks as
possible into the active packets and leave the remaining seqnums in the
RTPSource. In order to avoid sending outdated NACK later on, we save the
seqnum calculated deadline and cleanup the outdated seqnums before the
next RTCP send.
Fixes#583
Calling rtp_session_send_rtcp before marking the source as requiring a
pli/fir/nack meant the rtcp_thread could be scheduled and start running
before the source was updated. This meant the request would not be sent
early but instead was transmitted with the next regular RTCP packet.
Add test for nack generation.
If the current time is equal to the early rtcp time deadline, there is
no need to schedule a timer. This ensure that immediate feedback is
really immediate and simplify implementing unit tests with the test
clock, which stops perfectly on the timeout time.
This fix has been extracted from Pexip feature patch called
"rtpsession: Allow instant transmission of RTCP packets"
One comments in gst_rtp_session_chain_send_rtp_common() is referring to
groups in a buffer list, however this concept of "group" comes from
GStreamer 0.10 and does not exist anymore in GStreamer 1.0, so update the
comment to refer to buffers instead.
The update_receiver_stats() function is called also when sending packets
in rtp_source_send_rtp(), and sending packets may happen using a buffer
list rather than individual buffers.
So update the stats using the actual number of packets sent.
NOTE: this is fine for the receive path too (rtp_process_send_rtp)
because the receive path does not support buffer lists and
pinfo->packets would always be equal to 1 in this case.
This is needed for the case you don't know in advance all the sessions
you will be using, but would like to place all the related AUX element
in the same GstBin. As per current implementation, each time an sender
AUX bin is requested and returned, RTPBin will walk the src pads and
create sessions for these pads.
In the current implementation, if a src pad already have a sessions, it
returns an error and stops. As a side effect, if an AUX bin is reused in
a following AUX bin request, it can only work if the pads are created on
the last request.
This change simply relax the restriction in order to keep walking, and
just ensure that all newly created pads have a sessions.
In commit 28e5f9098 (rtpbin: use PacketInfo for the sender, 2013-09-13)
the rtp_source_send_rtp signature changed but the documentation was not
adjusted to match the new one.
Update the documentation to match the function signature.
Some functions now accept a generic 'gpointer data' parameter because
they can work either on a single buffer or a buffer list.
However the comments were still referring to the old 'GstBuffer *buffer'
parameter, so update the comments to match the actual functions
signature.
So far we assumed that if all sources are bye, this meant we needed to
send an EOS on the RTCP sink. The problem is that this case may happens
if we only had one internal source and it detected a collision.
So now we limit the EOS forwarding to when there is a send_rtp_sink pad
and that this pad has received EOS. We don'tcheck the recv_rtp_sink
since the code does not wait for the bye to be send before sending EOS
to the RTCP src pad.
This is useful when implementing custom retransmission mechanism like
RIST to prevent RTCP from being produces for the retransmitted SSRC.
This would also be used in general for various purpose when customizing
an RTP base pipeline.
If it goes over 2^15 packets, it will think it has rolled over
and start dropping all packets. So make sure the seqnum distance is not too big.
But let's not limit it to a number that is too small to avoid emptying it
needlessly if there is a spurious huge sequence number, let's allow at
least 10k packets in any case.
This reverts commit dcd3ce9751.
This functionality was implemented for gstopenwebrtc, but it
turned out this was not actually needed for webrtc bundling
support, as shown in webrtcbin. It also doesn't correspond
to any standards.
This is an API break, but nothing should actually depend on
this, at least not for its initial purpose.
Changes in rtpbin.c were reverted manually, to preserve some
refactoring that had occurred in the original commit.
Fixes#537
When the EOS event is received, run all timers immediately and avoid
pushing the EOS downstream before this has been run. This ensures that
the lost packet statistics are accurate.
After EOS is received, it is pointless to wait for further events,
specially waiting on timers. This patches fixes two cases where we could
wait instead of returning GST_FLOW_EOS and trigger a spin of the loop
function when EOS is queued, regardless if this EOS is the queue head or
not.
This is an extra internal recurisve lock use to avoid having to take
both sink pad streams lock all the time. This patch renamed it
INTERLNAL_STREAM_LOCK/UNLOCK() to avoid confusion with possible upstream
GST_PAD API.