Currently, if prepare() takes too much time, we skip the call to render().
The side effect of this, is that we endup starving the render(). The solution
in this patch is to always render frames that are on time before prepare() is
executed. This will maximize the number of frames we display and smoothly
degrade the rendering performance.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729335
They are very confusing for people, and more often than not
also just not very accurate. Seeing 'last reviewed: 2005' in
your docs is not very confidence-inspiring. Let's just remove
those comments.
We iterate the current discont group backwards and push each GOP forwards,
starting from the last one. However if the first buffer in the current
discont group is a keyframe, we will keep it around until next time,
which is far from ideal. Just push it.
This prevents situations where a first branch would get seeked and
receive a buffer before all branches got seeked, and thus collected
would get called based on EOS from the previous segment.
As a consequence, during the process of seeking, don't decrease
the eospads number when a FLUSH_STOP is received.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724571
Don't set the size to -1 in automatic_eos mode (which also updates the
duration to -1). We only want automatic_eos mode influence the maxsize
calculations without any side effects.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724564
This defaults to TRUE and if it is set to FALSE it is the subclasses
responsibility to return GST_FLOW_EOS from the create() vmethod once
the stream is done.
Store the eos event seqnum and use it when creating the
new eos event to be pushed downstream. To know if the eos
was caused by the eos events received on send_event, a
'forced_eos' flag is used to use the correct seqnum on
the event pushed downstream.
Useful if the application wants to check if the EOS message
was generated from its own pushed EOS or from another source
(stream really finished).
Also adds a test for this
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722791
If on passthrough during reverse playback, do not accumulate buffers as
baseparse will never check for DISCONT flag to push those buffers.
So just push buffers downstream as if it was forward playback.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721941
TIME segments are being ignored and a standard initialized
segment is used instead. This causes issues as not properly detecting
reverse playback or not cliping output based on the segment.
This seems to be a regression from one of the GstSegment/GstEvent
redesigns on the 0.10 -> 1.0 transition
It wasn't required, instead baseparse was using it to check the media
caps to identify if it was handling audio or video.
The pending_segment was removed and a checked_media boolean
replaced it for a more accurate naming.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721350
A GAP event is handled as an empty buffer by sinks and they expect
to receive start up events before GAP events (like a segment).
This is important specially if there is a GAP at the beginning of
a stream (before any buffers) so that the segment event can be
pushed downstream before the GAP
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721350
* fix typo GstBufferFlag -> GstBufferFlags
* fix typo GstFeatures -> GstCapsFeatures
* fix typo GstAllocatorParams -> GstAllocationParams
* fix typo GstContrlSources -> GstControlSource
* do not refer to gstcheck as an object
* make references gtk_init() and tcase_set_timeout() not be references
* gst_element_get_pad() renamed gst_element_get_static_pad()
* gst_clock_id_wait_async_full() renamed gst_clock_id_wait_async()
* _drop_element() is really gst_queue_array_drop_element()
* gst_pad_accept_caps() was removed, do not refer to it
* separate GST_META_TAG_MEMORY_STR declaration from description
* do not describe removed gst_collect_pads_collect()
* correctly link to GstElementClass' virtual set_context()
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719614