When the ringbuffer is deactivated and then acquired, if the audio clock
provided by the sink gets reset to zero, we need to add an offset to the
clock to make sure that subsequent samples are written out at the right
times. While we need to leave this to derived classes to take care of
when they provide their own clock (since that clock may or may not be
reset to zero), we can do this ourselves if we know the provided clock
is our own (which does reset to zero on a re-acquire).
When we are using the fast linear resampler, use the ->inc to calculate
the first and last pixel we need so that we can do vertical resampling
on the right amount of pixels.
Don't feed 64-bit integer variable into vararg function that expects
an unsigned integer to go with GST_TAG_TRACK_NUMBER. This would
cause crashes on 32-bit platforms, and if not that then test
failures if the comparisons fail later (at least on big endian
platforms).
CLAMP checks both if value is '< 0' and '> max'. Value will never be a negative
number since it in an unsigned integer. Removing that check and only checking
if it is bigger than max and setting it appropriately.
CID #1271606
When we modify a GList (via g_list_delete_link), always reassign the
new head to the original GList. Otherwise we end up with
filtered_errors being corrupt (the head might have been the element
removed)
Use smaller steps for lower rates to allow more
fine-grained control. Handle jump across 0 properly
from both sides (just flip direction where we would
have gone down to 0 instead). Don't artificially
limit rates to +/- 10x. Print new rate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745174
Only activate the scaler fastpath for x2 up and downscale when the
scaler method is respectively nearest and linear because that is what
those fastpaths really implement.
Add support for alpha. Make it possible to copy, set and multiply the
alpha value of a frame during conversion.
Set the border alpha to 0xff by default.
Go over some of the fastpaths and add alpha handling.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745006
This function is static, and only ever called with the expose lock
taken. It thus has no reason to take this lock itself.
This was introduced by one of my locking fixes from 741355.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741355
Check if dbin->decode_chain is NULL before running drain_and_switch_chains()
because if it is, we shouldn't run that function or it will segfault.
CID #1271074
Make sure to update the output segment to track the segment
we're decoding in, but don't actually push it downstream until
after buffers are decoded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744806
Otherwise if there are multiple parsers we would most likely break negotiation
of the stream-format/alignment wanted by the decoders as parsers generally
support all possible stream-formats and alignments.
If caps on a newly added pad are NULL, analyze_new_pad will try to
acquire the chain lock to add a probe to the pad so the chain can
be built later. This comes from the streaming thread, in response
to headers or other buffers causing this pad to be added, so the
stream lock is taken.
Meanwhile, another thread might be destroying the chain from a
downward state change. This will cause the chain to be freed with
the chain lock taken, and some elements are set to NULL here, which
can include the parser. This causes pad deactivation, which tries
to take the element's pad's stream lock, deadlocking.
Fix this by keeping track of which elements need setting to NULL,
and only do this after the chain lock is released. Only the chain
manipulation needs to be locked, not the elements' state changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741355