Don't use the buffer caps for negotiation anymore but use the CAPS events.
Make the _set_caps method produce the CAPS event, add some backward
compatibility code to trigger the setcaps functions on src and sinkpads.
Remove all negotiation code from the chain functions.
Don't use the GST_PAD_CAPS variable anymore to store the caps but retrieve the
caps from the sticky event array.
Remove the context again, adding an extra layer of refcounting and object
creation to manage an array is too complicated and inefficient. Use a simple
array again.
Also implement event updates when calling gst_pad_chain() and
gst_event_send_event() directly.
Pass the context downstream when it got updated.
Have two ways of informing downstream of events, do a full context update when
the CONTEXT_PENDING flag is set and simply forward the event otherwise.
Set the CONTENT_PENDING flag when linking pads.
We don't need to old context anymore when updating the context of a pad.
If there is no custom getcaps function on a sink pad, then changes in
downstream caps will never be propagated, so there is no point in trying to
renegotiate the capabilities.
This reverts commit 9ef1346b1f.
Way to much for one commit and I'm not sure we want to get rid of the pad caps
just like that. It's nice to have the buffer and its type in onw nice bundle
without having to drag the complete context with it.
Resetting the result is not necessary when resyncing because
pads that previously got the event will be skipped and we
need to consider the results of the previous pushes.
Copy the sticky events from the srcpad to the sinkpad when linking pads. Set the
STICKY_PENDING flag to make sure that the sticky events are dispatched before
pushing the next buffer to the element.
Add the sticky flag to events and a sticky index.
Keep sticky events in an array on each pad.
Remove GST_EVENT_SRC(), it is causing refcycles with sticky events, was not used
and is not very interesting anyway.
Remove pad_alloc and all references. This can now be done more efficiently and
more flexible with the ALLOCATION query and the bufferpool objects. There is no
reverse negotiation yet but that will be done with an event later.
As GST_SCHEDULING reports when buffers pass through pads due to
gst_pad_push calls, they are a good way of tracking the progress of
buffers through pipelines. As such, adding output of the buffer pointers
to these messages allows tracking of specific buffers, easing debugging.
Check the sinkpad for the flushing state before calling the chainfunction on the
pad. We do this by checking the cache (which is also cleared on the srcpad when
the sink is set to flushing).
Fixes#641928
Make the _get_caps functions behave like the _get_caps_reffed variants and
remove the _reffed variants. This means that _get_caps doesn't return a writable
caps anymore and an explicit _make_writable() is needed before modifying the
caps.
There is no need to cache the peer chainfunction as we can just as efficiently
get to it from the peer object. Also not caching the chain function works better
because then we automatically get the new chainfunctions when they change.
Build the cache while we push data. When we don't have a cache, we run the
slowpath and collect cacheable properties. When all conditions are met, keep the
cached data around so that we can more efficiently push data around.
Otherwise the source will stay at NULL, the event is passed to the
peerpad via gst_pad_send_event() and then the peerpad is set as
source of the event instead of the originating pad.
A flush-stop event would make a pad unflushing, causing it
to start acting as an activated pad. This, for example,
could lead to the chain function being called when stuff
isn't initialized.
This could happend when setting qtdemux to NULL while a seek
was being handled in the upstream filesrc (in push mode).
This patch makes it check if it is activated before setting
it to unflushing.
This is the same behaviour as if we had a pad template caps of
GST_CAPS_ANY on any of the pads (i.e. the actual check will be done
during caps negotiation).
Instead just check that the caps intersect with the pad template.
The elements should properly accept/refuse the caps in setcaps().
Shaves off calling the default implementation of acceptcaps which does
an expensive gst_pad_get_caps() (so if you have 50 of those elements in
a row, you'd be doing factorial(50) gst_pad_get_caps...).
Does not break any module unit test and most apps work fine.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=622740
Since everything GstXML related has been deprecated, we can now skip the
libxml includes from the public headers when GST_DISABLE_DEPRECATED is
defined.
See #463435.
Pipeline serialisation to and from XML is horribly broken for all
but the most simple use cases, and will likely never be fixed.
Make sure everyone playing around with these tools is aware of
this, to avoid frustration. See countless bug reports in bugzilla.
Fixes bug #622685.
A pad is 'negotiable' when its container element is in a state greater
than GST_STATE_READY
API:gst_pad_is_negotiable
API:gst_pad_set_negotiable
API:GST_PAD_NEGOTIABLE
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=618644
Just truncate and then fixate. We check for empty caps in the begin and a
fixate-func that empties a caps would be broken. It also helps lazy caps impl.
in bug 618853 by avoiding the gst_caps_get_size().
We need to check the pad caps on the srcpad as well as on the sinkpad. Revert
this commit as it removes the check on the srcpad and can leave the srcpad
unnegotiated (or negotiated with wrong caps)
This reverts commit 07dc1e5b49.
This check is not necesarry as we are not negotiating anymore. And it can
be wrong if upstream can't produce this caps anymore, but downstream can
process them fine.
When we unblock a pad with the same user_data, the destroy callback is not
called. This leads to refcounting leaks that cannot be avoided. Instead always
call the destroy notify whenever we install a new pad block.
In particular, this fixes a nasty pad leak in decodebin2.
Also update the unit test to have more accurate comments and test the required
behaviour.
The default gst_pad_fixate_caps() previously would only fixate each individual
struct. In case there are multiple structs, the resulting caps would still not
be fixed. In the spirit of how individual structs are fixated, this patch
changes gst_pad_fixate_caps() to remove all but the first struct.
Fixes#595886
There's not much point in using GST_DEBUG_FUNCPTR with GObject
virtual functions such as get_property, set_propery, finalize and
dispose, since they'll never be used by anyone anyway. Saves a
few bytes and possibly a tenth of a polar bear.