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.
stream.segment should be updated with the values of the current edit
list, also when a new `moov` is received. Unfortunately this was not
being the case because of an early return.
As a consequence of this bugs, no end of movie clipping was being
performed on the new moov and no segment event was being emitted.
When performing stream switching (e.g. in MSE) the new moov may have a
different edit list. This is often the case when switching between
baseline H.264 (which lacks B-frames) and more demanding profiles. For
this reason it's important to emit a new segment in order to be able
to get matching stream times.
This patch moves the initialization of QtDemuxStream.segment from
gst_qtdemux_add_stream() to _create_stream(). This ensures the segment
is always initialized when the stream is created.
Otherwise the segment format is left as GST_FORMAT_UNDEFINED in the case
were a track is reparsed and qtdemux_reuse_and_configure_stream() is
called instead of gst_qtdemux_add_stream(). (See
qtdemux_expose_streams() in the non streams-aware case.)
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.
This reverts "6f3734c305 rtpssrcdemux: Only forward stick events while
holding the sinkpad stream lock" and actually hold on the internal
stream lock. This prevents in some needed case having a second
streaming thread poping in and messing up event ordering.
While forwarding serialized event, we use gst_pad_forward() function.
In the forward callback (GstPadForwardFunction) we always return
TRUE. Returning true there will stop the dispatching procedure. As a
side effect, only one events is receiving the events. This breaks
when sending EOS from the applicaiton, it also breaks the latency
tracer.
This patch enables matroskademux to receive seeks before it reaches
GST_MATROSKA_READ_STATE_DATA.
Closes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-good/issues/514
This also enables receiving seeks in the element READY state.
When such a seek is received, it is stored to be later handled when
GST_MATROSKA_READ_STATE_DATA is reached.
Reset RTPSession when rtpsession changes state from PAUSED to READY.
Without this change, a stored last_rtptime in RTPSource could interfere
with RTP timestamp generation in RTCP Sender Report.
Fixes#510
If ctts (CompositionOffsetBox) has larger sample_offset
(offset between PTS and DTS) than (2 * duration) of the stream,
assume the ctts box to be corrupted and ignore the box.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797262
This fixes a bug where in some files mehd.fragment_duration is one unit
less than the actual duration of the fragmented movie, as explained below:
mehd.fragment_duration is computed by scaling the end timestamp of
the last frame of the movie in (in nanoseconds) by the movie timescale.
In some situations, the end timestamp is innacurate due to lossy conversion to
fixed point required by GstBuffer upstream.
Take for instance a movie with 3 frames at exactly 3 fps.
$ gst-launch-1.0 -v videotestsrc num-buffers=3 \
! video/x-raw, framerate="(fraction)3/1" \
! x264enc \
! fakesink silent=false
dts: 999:59:59.333333334, pts: 1000:00:00.000000000, duration: 0:00:00.333333333
dts: 999:59:59.666666667, pts: 1000:00:00.666666666, duration: 0:00:00.333333334
dts: 1000:00:00.000000000, pts: 1000:00:00.333333333, duration: 0:00:00.333333333
The end timestamp is calculated by qtmux in this way:
end timestamp = last frame DTS + last frame DUR - first frame DTS =
= 1000:00:00.000000000 + 0:00:00.333333333 - 999:59:59.333333334 =
= 0:00:00.999999999
qtmux needs to round this timestamp to the declared movie timescale, which can
ameliorate this distortion, but it's important that round-neareast is used;
otherwise it would backfire badly.
Take for example a movie with a timescale of 30 units/s.
0.999999999 s * 30 units/s = 29.999999970 units
A round-floor (as it was done before this patch) would set fragment_duration to
29 units, amplifying the original distorsion from 1 nanosecond up to 33
milliseconds less than the correct value. The greatest distortion would occur
in the case where timescale = framerate, where an entire frame duration would
be subtracted.
Also, rounding is added to tkhd duration computation too, which
potentially has the same problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=793959
... before the old streams is not exposed yet for MSS stream.
In case of DASH, newly configured streams will be exposed
whenever demux got moov without delay.
Meanwhile, since there is no moov box in MSS stream,
the caps will act like moov. Then, there is delay for exposing new pads
until demux got the first moof.
So, following scenario is possible only for MSS but not for DASH,
STREAM-START -> CAPS -> (configure stream but NOT EXPOSED YET)
-> STREAM-START-> CAPS (configure stream again).
In above scenario, we can reuse old stream without any stream reconfigure.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797239
Apart from the obvious drawbacks of hardcoding, the drawback here was
that, if we subtracted 2 frames (instead of 2.6) from the target running
time, we'd request the next keyframe a bit too far into the future,
which would make our files split at the wrong position.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797293