We now pass the controls, associated to a request, queue the bitstream, qeueue
a picture buffer to decode into and finally queue the request. This now runs
until the buffer pool is exhausted. The next step will be to dequeue.
In this patch we fill the control structure with the bitstream paramter and
copy the bitstream data into V4L2 memory. Slice paramters are only the subset
of what Hantro needs, without any support for interlaced content.
This is a pooling allocator and the buffer pool does nothing other then
reusing the GstBuffer structure. Note that the pool is an internal pool, so
the start/stop/set_config virtual functions are not implemented.
This introduces the skeleton of the H264 decoder. The plugin will list the
devices and register a subclass of the GstV4L2CodecH264Dec base class. The
subclass will pick the required specific information from the GstV4L2Device
stored in the subclass structure.
This is a GstObject which will be used to hold on media and video device file
descriptor and provide abstracted ioctl calls with these descriptor. At the
moment this helper contains just enough to enumerate the supported format.
This part will be used by the plugin to register the CODEC specific elements..
Most of the features we need are very early or not expose yet in the uAPI.
Using an internal copy ensure that we everything we need is defined avoiding
to add load of checks and conditionnal code.
This introduces a GstV4L2CodecDevice structure and helper to retrieve a
list of CODEC device drivers. In order to find the device driver we
enumerate all media devices with UDEV. We then get the media controller
topology and locate a entity with function encoder or decoder and make
sure it is linked to two V4L2 IO entity pointing to the same device
node.
The media driver can support HEVC 8-bit 422 encoding for non-lowpower
mode since ICL[1], so VPP is not needed for this case.
Sample pipeline:
gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! video/x-raw,format=YUY2 ! msdkh265enc ! \
filesink location=output.h265
[1] https://github.com/intel/media-driver#decodingencoding-features
gsth265parser does it already. Although corresponding API of h265parser is
gst_h265_sei_free, _clear suffix is more consistent naming for h264parser
since there are gst_h264_{sps,pps}_clear().
DXVA supports two kinds of texture structure for DPB, one is
"1) texture array" and the other is "2) array of texture".
1) is a type of texture which is single ID3D11Texture2D object having
ArraySize greater than one. So the ID3D11Texture2D itself is a set of texture.
Each sub texture of this type mush have identical resolution, format and so on,
and the number of sub texture in a texture array is fixed.
2) is an array of usual ID3D11Texture2D object. That means each
ID3D11Texture2D is independent each other and might have different resolution as well.
Moreover, we can modify the number of frames of the array dynamically.
This type is more flexible than "1) texture array" in terms of dynamic
behavior and also this type of texture can be used for shader resource view
but "1) texture array" couldn't be.
If "2) array of texture" is supported by driver, DXVA spec is saying that
it's preferred format over "1) texture array" in terms of performance.
The set of supported color space by DXGI is not full combination of
our colorimetry. That means we should convert color space to one
of supported color space by DXGI. This commit modifies the color space
selection step so that d3d11window can find the best matching DXGI color space
first and then the selected input/output color space will be referenced
by shader and/or d3d11videoprocessor.
Add new property to signalling that there is no incoming data
from peer. This can be useful if users want to stop the streaming
when the connection is alive but no packet is arriving.
openssl 1.1.1e does some stricker EOF handling and will throw an error
if the EOF is unexpected (like in the middle of a record). As we are
streaming data into openssl here, it is entirely possible that we push
data from multiple buffers/packets into openssl separately.
From the openssl changelog:
Changes between 1.1.1d and 1.1.1e [17 Mar 2020]
*) Properly detect EOF while reading in libssl. Previously if we hit an EOF
while reading in libssl then we would report an error back to the
application (SSL_ERROR_SYSCALL) but errno would be 0. We now add
an error to the stack (which means we instead return SSL_ERROR_SSL) and
therefore give a hint as to what went wrong.
[Matt Caswell]
We can relax the EOF signalling to only return TRUE when we have stopped
for any reason (EOS, error).
Will also remove a spurious EOF error from previous openssl version.
Otherwise when bundling, only the changed streams would be considered as
to whether the bundled transport needs to be blocked as all streams are
inactive.
Scenario is one transceiver changes direction to inactive and as that is
the only change in transciever direction, the entire bundled transport would
be blocked even if there are other active transceivers inside the same bundled
transport that are still active.
Fix by always checking the activeness of a stream regardless of if the
transceiverr has changed direction.
Adds properties to the devices listed in GstDeviceMonitor by the
applemedia plugin.
These properties are:
- device.api (always set to "avf")
- avf.unique_id
- avf.model_id
- avf.manufacturer (except on iOS)
- avf.has_flash
- avf.has_torch
Everything except device.api is taken directly from the AVCaptureDevice object
provided by AVFoundation.
Both 2 and 4 are supported version of AAC ADTS format stream.
So we need to set correct version to help negotiation
especially for non-autopluggable pipeline.