Add a method that memory implementations can call to initialize the standard
GstMemory structure.
Move the parent handling in the _free handler.
Rearrange some internal function parameters so that the order is consistent.
Add more memory examples
Move the locking methods from GstMemory to GstMiniObject.
Add a miniobject flag to enable LOCKABLE objects. LOCKABLE objects can
use the lock/unlock API to control the access to the object.
Add a minobject flag that allows you to lock an object in readonly mode.
Modify the _is_writable() method to check the shared counter for LOCKABLE
objects. This allows us to control writability separately from the refcount for
LOCKABLE objects.
We added a minimum length of three letters originally so we would
fail to recognise DOS/Windows-style filenames as valid URIs (as we
should). Two should be just fine as well.
Add option to avoid build binaries. When building for platforms like
android, you might want to not link any "final" binary, mostly because
it requires special link flags or other parts of code that aren't
in the C library.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677621
Now that TOCs are refcounted and have a GType, we can just
stuff a ref of the TOC directly into the various toc
event/message/query structures and get rid of lots of
cracktastic GstStructure <-> GstToc serialisation and
deserialisation code. We lose some TOC sanity checking
in the process, but that should really be done when
it's being created anyway.
Let's keep it simple for now:
gst_toc_setter_reset_toc() -> gst_toc_setter_reset()
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_copy() -> removed
gst_toc_setter_get_toc() -> returns a ref now
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_entry_copy() -> removed,
use TOC functions instead
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_entry() -> removed,
use TOC functions instead
gst_toc_setter_add_toc_entry() -> removed,
to avoid problems with (refcount-dependent)
writability of TOC; use TOC functions instead
When the bin does an upward state change, try to avoid doing a downward state
change on the child and vice versa.
Add some more unit tests for this fix.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621833
It causes the timestamp to go wrong, should not cause much of a performance
increase and in the cases where it is faster, it is broken in 0.10 as well.
We should try to review this when rewriting the adapter for 0.11 memory
features.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674791