Just shows devices with basic info and exits. Or will
wait for more devices to show up or be removed with
the --follow option. It's also possible to pass filters
as command line arguments in the form DEVICE_CLASSES
or DEVICE_CLASSES:CAPS.
Recognize H.264 Level 5.2, as exposed by modern 2160p30+ streams,
i.e. commonly known as 4K. Also add initial support for handling
Annex.G (SVC) profiles.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732269
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
We can't convert to ANY capsfeatures, they are only there so that we
can passthrough whatever downstream can support... but we definitely
don't want to return them to upstream.
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.
Canceling the accept/select happens when the source is shut down. This is
not an error and the GST_FLOW_ERROR causes problems when only part of the
pipeline is shut down.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731567
We are scaling from a unit in microseconds to a unit in ((1 << 32) per seconds).
We therefore scale the microseconds values by:
value of a second in the target unit (1 << 32)
--------------------------------------------------------------
value of a second in the origin format (1 000 000 microsecond)
When playing RTSP streams there will be one decodebin per stream. If some of
them fail because of a missing plugin we should not fail completely but play
the supported streams at least.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730868
A simple '&' is not sufficiant. With mmapping_flags == PROT_READ and
prot == PROT_READ|PROT_WRITE the check produces the wrong result.
Change the check to make sure that prot is a subset of mmapping_flags.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730559
When a pipeline using alsasink and push mode upstream fails
to preroll, the following state will be the case:
- A loop upstream will be PAUSED, pushing a first buffer
- alsasink will be READY, pending PAUSED, because async
On error, the pipeline will switch to NULL. alsasink is in
READY, so goes to NULL immediately. It zeroes its cached
caps. Meanwhile, the upstream loop can cause a caps query,
conccurent with the state change. This will use those cached
caps. If the zeroing happens between the NULL test and the
dereferencing, GStreamer will critical down in the GstValue
code.
Since it appears that such a gap between states (PAUSED
and pushing upstream, and NULL downstream) is expected, we
need to protect the read/write access to the cached caps.
This fixes the critical.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731121
This lets oggdemux determine they are not delta units, and removes
spurious per packet warnings about being unable to determine the
packet's keyframeness.
Aggregate buffering messages to only post the lower value
to avoid setting pipeline to playing while any multiqueue
is still buffering.
There are 3 scenarios where the entries should be removed from
the list:
1) When decodebin is set to READY
2) When an element posts a 100% buffering (already implemented)
3) When a multiqueue is removed from decodebin.
For item 3 we don't need to handle it because this should only
happen when either 1 is hapenning or when it is playing a
chained file, for which number 2 should have happened for the
previous stream to finish
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726423