These parameters are incorrectly regarded as mutable in G-IR making them
"incompatible" with languages that are explicit about mutability like
Rust. In order to clean up the code and expected API there, update the
signatures here, right at the source (instead of overriding them in
Gir.toml and hoping for the best).
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-base/-/merge_requests/1005>
The sink_query just uses context, other_context and display to query info.
But all these objects can be changed or distroyed in state_change() func
and other places.
This patch is not very perfect. The condition race still exists in other
places in this element. All the functions directly access these objects
without protection. Most of them are executed when the data is pushing and
draw context/window have already been established, so they should not have
problems. But the sink_query and propose_allocation functions are the query
-like functions and executed in query context, which can be called in any
state of the element. So it can cause some crash issues because of destroyed
context object.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-base/-/merge_requests/922>
By passing NULL to `g_signal_new` instead of a marshaller, GLib will
actually internally optimize the signal (if the marshaller is available
in GLib itself) by also setting the valist marshaller. This makes the
signal emission a bit more performant than the regular marshalling,
which still needs to box into `GValue` and call libffi in case of a
generic marshaller.
Note that for custom marshallers, one would use
`g_signal_set_va_marshaller()` with the valist marshaller instead.
Doing so involves retrieving the current viewport from OpenGL which as
with any glGet operation, is expensive.
This means that the various sinks need to reset the viewport on draw.
In the process, fix resizing on cocoa.
The use of mediump as a specifier in GLSL shaders will have limited
resolution and when used as texture coordinates may become inaccurate
over texture sizes of 1024.
Binding the vertex array to 0 will unbind everything else already.
In the previous order older versions of the Intel GL driver caused
errors to be printed for every single call when disabling the vertex
attrib arrays after binding the vertex array to 0.
Fixes the internal viewconvert to not scale buffers for output with the
following pipeline:
gltestsrc ! glimagesink
It also fixes overlay composition with a resized output with an OpenGL
upstream:
gltestsrc ! timeoverlay ! glimagesink
Attempting to use the MAX(1, display_rect) would result in the overlay
composition attempting to draw into 1x1 buffer and calculate some
grossly incorrect sizes.
previously failing case:
gltestsrc ! textoverlay text=GStreamer ! glimagesinkelement
When doing a 3D/multiview transformation and rescaling to
match the output window size, the resulting PAR may
not match the input any more and needs recalculating,
or else the GstSample reported to client-draw has the
wrong PAR.
Even if the input is monoscopic, the app might want to display
it in a different layout, to do side-by-side for VR for example,
so if the app changes the output-multiview-mode always use that.
when using internal window, window resize should work
when pause state, but expose only do redisplay when
window_id is valid. So expose should do redisplay all
the time.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787394
The same symbol also exists in libgstgl, although marked as private and
internal. This has no effect when doing static linking and there's a
symbol conflict.
Provide a function to get the affine matrix in the meta in terms of NDC
coordinates and use as a standard opengl matrix.
Also advertise support for the affine transformation meta in the allocation
query.
When application change pipeline state NULL->READY and then READY->NULL,
glimagesink will not clear glsink->window_id. After that, when application
change state NULL->READY, the new_window_id is equal to window_id, glimagesink
will not set window handle. It will use the internal window but not the window
create by application.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765241