Otherwise, when rtpm2src cancels an inflight operation that has a queued
message stored, then the rtmp connection operation is not stopped.
If the cancellation occurs during rtmp connection start up, then
rtpm2src does not have any way of accessing the connection object as it
has not been returned yet. As a result, rtpm2src will cancel, the
connection will still be processing things and the
GMainContext/GMainLoop associated with the outstanding operation will be
destroyed. All outstanding operations and the rtmpconnection object will
therefore be leaked in this case.
Fixes: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/issues/1425
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1862>
Making the thread receiving the stats wait on the loop to respond was
not a good idea, as the latter can get blocked on the streaming thread.
Have get_stats read the values directly, adding a lock to ensure we
don't read garbage.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1550>
The former uses a thread-safe way of getting statistics from the
connection without having to protect the fields with a lock.
The latter produces a zeroed statistics structure for use when no
connection exists.
Apply outgoing sizes only after writing the chunk to the peer. This is
important particularly for the set chunk size and allows exposing it
without threading issues.
Move output chunking from gst_rtmp_connection_queue_message into
gst_rtmp_connection_start_write, which effectively moves it from the
streaming thread into the loop thread.
This allows us to handle the outgoing chunk-size message (which is
generated by changing the future chunk-size property) properly, which
could come from any other thread.
The message buffers are created using `gst_rtmp_message_new` and thus
always contain a GstRtmpMeta. Add checks to appease Coverity's static
analysis.
CID 1455596
CID 1455384