Does not matter here but makes Coverity more happy. It can't
know that g_list_remove() only looks at the pointer value but
does not dereference it.
CID 1348454
Currently, the query values are being set even if the query itself was
determined to have failed. Fix this to ensure the values are only set in
case of a query success.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760479
There's not much lost by having the clock idle around a bit longer but it will
potentially allow anybody wanting to use the same clock server again to sync
much faster.
If multiple net/NTP clocks are created for the same server, reuse the same
internal clock for all of them. This makes sure that we don't flood the server
with too many requests and also possibly allows faster synchronization if
there already was an earlier synchronized clock when creating a new one.
Watching videos with variant bitrate is common to have delta
more than 10 kbps, resulting in tag list spam.
Instead of relying on fixed 10 kpbs delta, it is better to
calculale the difference in percentage and update tag list
only when bitrate changes more than 2%.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759055
My previous fix for #758029 wasn't quite right and simply made the race rarer.
Some of the files are installed by install-exec and others by install-exec, so
the hooks need to be split too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758029
This reverts commit 2c475a0355.
This causes issues with h264parse. It breaks timestamps as
there are headers in the middle of the stream and this patch
makes the timestamps for those differ from the ones that
are adjusted, creating a discontinuity and leading to sync
issues.
Otherwise the buffer was left with the original values and later would
be compared with other buffers that were converted to runninn time,
leading to bad interleaving of multiple streams.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757961
baseparse tries to preserve timestamps from upstream if
it is running on a time segment and write that to
output buffers. It assumes the first DTS is going to be
segment.start and sets that to the first buffers. In case
the buffer is a header buffer, it had no timestamps and
will have only the DTS set due to this mechanism.
This patch prevents this by skipping this behavior for
header buffers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757961
The install hook needs to be a install-data-hook not an install-exec-hook as the
helpers are installed into helperdir which is considered data (only path
variables with "exec" in are considered executables).
The explicit dependency on install-helpersPROGRAMS was an attempt at solving
this, but this causes occasional races where install-helpersPROGRAMS can run
twice in parallel (once via install-all, once via the hook's dependency).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758029
They take a GstBaseSink instance as argument at not a GstPad. Rename the
argument to 'obj' which is not miss leading and in line with
GST_BASE_SINK_PAD(obj).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756954
In file included from gst-ptp-helper.c:40:0:
/usr/include/net/if.h:265:19: error: field 'ifru_addr' has incomplete type
struct sockaddr ifru_addr;
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756136
When g_option_context_parse fails, context and error variables are not getting free'd
which results in memory leaks. Free'ing the same.
And replacing g_error_free with g_clear_error, which checks if the error being passed
is not NULL and sets the variable to NULL on free'ing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753851
The default padding I introduced in d4f81fb4e6 is
actually only 4 pointers and on 32bit platforms already smaller than the union.
Replace it with a fixed 64byte padding. Don't add the normal padding for now.
Fixes#755822
Broke this when I removed the G_GNUC_PRINTF in a previous
commit to fix indentation, since it was not really needed.
Turns out unlike gcc clang warns though if a non-literal
format string is passed then. Fix indentation differently.
http://clang.llvm.org/docs/AttributeReference.html#format-gnu-format
While this technically is an abi break, we decided to do this:
1) the struct is documented to be internal
2) the struct is alloced and freed inside the library
3) there are no public methods that receive or return instances
4) the only code known to use this struct are classes containd here
gst_segment_to_position might cause confusion, especially with the addition of
gst_segment_position_from_stream_time . Deprecated gst_segment_to_position
now, and replaced it with gst_segment_position_from_running_time.
Also added unit tests.