On various 32 bit systems, time_t is actually 64 bits while long is
still only 32 bits. The macro would wrongly trigger its assertion in
this case if a value with more than 68 years worth of seconds is
converted.
Examples are various newer 32 bit platforms and old ones that are
compiled with -D_TIME_BITS=64.
Also statically assert that time_t is either 32 or 64 bits. Other values
might need adjustments in the macro.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/6869>
This can be used to store informational messages, errors or
warnings which can later be shown to the user in gst-inspect-1.0,
which can be useful for plugins that expose elements dynamically
based on external libraries or hardware capabilities.
Status messages can then provide an indication as to why a
plugin doesn't have any elements listed, for example.
Plus unit test to make sure code paths are exercised a little.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3832>
Today when using the `splitmuxsrc` on a collection of files named as:
```
item0.mkv
item1.mkv
item2.mkv
[...]
item10.mkv
item11.mkv
[...]
```
You will get a continuous stream made in the order of:
```
item0.mkv -> item1.mkv -> item10.mkv -> item11.mkv -> [...]
```
You can fix this by having smarter names of the items:
```
item000.mkv
item001.mkv
item002.mkv
[...]
item010.mkv
item011.mkv
[...]
```
Will get you:
```
item000.mkv -> item001.mkv -> item003.mkv -> item004.mkv -> [...]
```
But, we could also "fix" the former case by using natural ordering when
comparing the files in gstsplitutils.c.
Fixes#2523
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4491>
- GstAnalyticRelationMeta is a base class for analytics
meta. It's able to store analytics results (GstAnalyticRelatableMtd)
and describe the relation between each analysis results.
- GstAnalysisRelationMeta also contain an algorithm able to explore
analysis results relation using a bfs.
- Relation(edge) between analysis results (vertice) are stored in an adjacency-matrix
that allow to quickly identify if two analysis results are related and by
which relation they related. It also work for indirect relation
and can provide the path of analysis results by which two
analysis results are related.
- One allocation per buffer to store analysis results. Here we rely on
the application to guess how much space will be required to store all
analysis results. This is something that could be improved
significantly but it's a starting point.
- Define common analysis results, classification, object-detection,
tracking that are subclass of GstAnalyticRelatableMtd. The also
provide exemple of how to extend GstAnalyticRelatableMtd to have them
benefit for the mechanim to express relation with other analysis
results.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4962>
Move the GstStructure field into public struct for direct access, that's
easier than having to call a function to get it. It is not an API/ABI
breakage to extend the public structure of a GstMeta because they are
always allocated by inside GStreamer. The structure is exposed already
by gst_custom_meta_get_structure() which does not return a copy/ref, so
it is locked into holding a GstStructure forever anyway.
Also add gst_meta_register_custom_simple() because most of the time only
a name is required, tags and transform functions are more niche
use-case.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/5385>
check_version(1.23.1) would return TRUE for a git development version
like 1.23.0.1, which is quite confusing and somewhat unexpected.
We fixed this up in the version check macros already in !2501, so this
updates the run-time check accordingly as well.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4513>