libnice doesn't touch the kernel buffer sizes. When dealing with RTP data,
it's generally advisable to increase them to avoid dropping packets locally.
This is especially important when running multiple higher bitrate streams at
the same time.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1366>
On shutdown, a previous iteration of dtsl_connection_process()
might be incomplete and leave a partial bio_buffer behind.
If the DTLS connection is already marked closed, drop out
of dtls_connection_process early without asserting.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1741>
The main context can disappear in gst_webrtc_bin_enqueue_task()
between checking the is_closed flag and enqueueing a source on the
main context. Protect the main context with the object lock instead
of the PC lock, and hold a ref briefly to make sure it stays alive.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1741>
When ttmlparse is in, e.g., an MPEG-DASH pipeline, there may be
whitespace between successive TTML documents in ttmlparse's accumulated
input. As libxml2 will fail to parse documents that have whitespace
before the opening XML declaration, ensure that any preceding whitespace
is not passed to libxml2.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1539>
In order to support the symbol g_enum_to_string in various
project using GStreamer ( gst-validate etc.), the glib minimum
version should be 2.56.0.
Remove compat code as glib requirement
is now > 2.56
Version used by Ubuntu 18.04 LTS
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1695>
SRT provides the original timestamp of a packet (with drift/skew corrected for
local clock), which is what should be used for timestamping the outgoing
buffers. This ensures that we output the packets with the same timestamp (and by
extension rate) as the original feed.
Also detect if packets were dropped (by checking the sequence number) and
properly set DISCONT flag on the outgoing buffer.
Finally answer the latency queries
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1658>
In live streaming, buffers sent by souphttpsrc are pushed to the live
adapter. The buffers in the adapter are sent out of mssdemux when it
is greater than 4096 bytes.
Occasionally, when seeking in live streams, if seek occurs just
after the last data chunk was received, and if this data chunk is
smaller than 4096 bytes, it will be kept in the live adapter.
This remaining data in the live adapter will be erroneously prepended
to the new data that is downloaded after seek and pushed out.
When qtdemux receives this data, since it does not start with
a moof box, it is impossible to demux the fragment, and bogus
size error will occur.
Clear out the live adapter on seek so that no unnecessary remaining
data is pushed out together with the new fragment after seeking.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1345>
As waiting for the load to be finished is specific to the WebView, it should be
done from our WPEView, not from the WPEContextThread. This fixes issues where
multiple wpesrc elements are created in sequence. Without this patch the first
view might receive erroneous buffer notifications.
Fixes#1386
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1568>
libnice now supports the concept of end-of-candidate, so use the API
for it. This also means that if you don't do that, the webrtcbin will
never declared the connection as failed.
This requires bumping the dependency to libnice 0.1.16
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1139>
gst_caps_new_simple gets wrong types for rate and channel which
may lead to a crash.
As 64-bit values for rate, depth, format, channels does not
make much sense and since any other functionality in gstreamer
expects G_TYPE_INT for channels and rate, we should stick to that
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1576>
This (so-far) Linux- and FreeBSD-only API lets users create file
descriptors purely in memory, without any backing file on the filesystem
and the race condition which could ensue when unlink()ing it.
It also allows seals to be placed on the file, ensuring to every other
process that we won’t be allowed to shrink the contents, potentially
causing a SIGBUS when they try reading it.
This patch is best viewed with the -w option of git log -p.
It is an almost exact copy of Wayland commit
6908c8c85a2e33e5654f64a55cd4f847bf385cae, see
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/wayland/wayland/merge_requests/4
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1577>
The WPEThreaded view is now split in 2 classes:
- WPEContextThread handles the persistent WebKit thread, where all WebKit API
calls should be handled.
- WPEView: is created from the WPEContextThread. It handles the WebView and
maintains the public interface on which wpesrc relies. This is the facade for
the WebView, basically. It takes care of dispatching API calls into the context
thread.
With these fixes it is now possible to create (and reuse) mutlple wpesrc
elements during the application lifetime.
Fixes#1372
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1484>
It is more appropriate to start closer to the live edge in
live streams. Some live streams maintain a large dvr window
(over few hours in some cases), so starting from the first
fragment will be too far away from the live edge.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1346>
opencv plugin is pulling a header which makses clang++ 10
complain a lot and blocks -werror.
```
/usr/include/opencv4/opencv2/flann/logger.h:83:36: error: format string is not a string literal [-Werror,-Wformat-nonliteral]
int ret = vfprintf(stream, fmt, arglist);
^~~
```
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1494>
Call gst_aggregator_selected_samples() after identifying the
caption buffers that will be added as a meta on the next video
buffer.
Implement GstAggregator.peek_next_sample.
Add an example that demonstrates usage of the new API in
combination with the existing buffer-consumed signal.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1390>
Receiving the WEBKIT_LOAD_COMMITTED event doesn't actually
mean we have committed an SHM buffer / image yet.
As this is the condition we are interested in, check it
instead.
Also wrap g_cond_wait in a loop for extra correctness points.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1476>
"waylandsink: use GstMemory instead of GstBuffer for cache lookup"
changes the cache key to GstMemory, but the cached data still needs
a pointer to the GstBuffer to control the buffer lifecycle.
If the GstMemory used as the cache key moves from one GstBuffer to
another, the pointer in the cached data will be out-of-date.
Update the current GstBuffer pointer for each frame so that it always
represents the currently in use (from attach to release) GstBuffer
for each wl_buffer.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1473>
The GstMemory objects contained in a GstBuffer could be replaced
by an upstream element, which would break the association beteen
the GstBuffer and the wayland wl_buffer, make the cache lookup
results incorrect.
This patch changes the cache lookup to use the first GstMemory
in a buffer instead. For multi-plane buffers, this assumes that
all of the GstMemory(s) will always be moved together as a set,
and that the same (first) GstMemory isn't used with different
combinations of other GstMemory(s).
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1401>
Instead of attaching a single wayland wl_buffer to each GStBuffer as qdata,
keep a separate cache for each display.
A unique wl_buffer and associated metadata is created for each display.
This allows for sharing of GstBuffer objects between multiple
displays, such as when using tee elements.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1401>
A pipeline like this:
closedcaption/x-cea-708,format=cdp,framerate=30000/1001 ! ccconverter ! closedcaption/x-cea-708,format=cc_data
would produce a critical/assert:
GStreamer-CRITICAL **: 14:21:11.509: gst_util_fraction_multiply: assertion 'a_d != 0' failed
because there would be no framerate field on ccconverter's output.
Fixed by always fixating a framerate if the input has a framerate.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1393>
Unclear why hotdoc wants 'gstavtp' as the plugin name here,
that's just wrong.
Add since marker and mark private subclasses as plugin API
so hotdoc knows they belong to the plugin and aren't external.
Fix GstAvtpAafTstampMode get_type() function.
keys_exported flag should be set only if keys are actually exported.
For that the next conditions are needed:
1 - SSL_export_keying_material on success
2 - SSL_get_selected_srtp_profile returns a valid profile
3 - The profile ID is SRTP_AES128_CM_SHA1_80 or SRTP_AES128_CM_SHA1_32
Also don't crash if NULL is returned as profile.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1156>
SURROUND is more to spec according to the FIXME comments, so add this.
Also add SIDE for 5 and 5.1 because of ffmpeg compatibility, because the
following pipeline downmixes to mono otherwise:
gst-launch-1.0 audiotestsrc num-buffers=1 ! audio/x-raw, channels=6 !
avenc_ac3 ! avdec_ac3 ! audioconvert ! fdkaacenc ! fakesink -v
Fixes#1327
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1352>
Unfortunately it means those tune enums don't show up in
the docs then, but if that's how it's gotta be..
(Problem at hand is that on Tim's machine x265enc gets an
tune=animation and on the CI machine this doesn't show up.)
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1354>
The unit tests only checked for vulkan_dep.found(), which can
be true if the libs are there but glslc was not found, in which
case the plugin wouldn't be built and the unit tests would fail
because of missing vulkan plugins.
Doesn't really make much sense to build the vulkan integration lib
either if we're not going to build the vulkan plugin, so just disable
both for now if glslc is not available.
Fixes#1301
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1307>
This is needed for cross-compiling without a build machine compiler
available. The option was added in 0.54, but we only need this in
Cerbero and it doesn't affect older versions so it should be ok.
Will only cause a spurious warning.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1266>
Instead of storing the raw cc_data, store the 2 cea608 fields individually
as well as the ccp data.
Simply copying the input cc_data to the output cc_data violates a number of
requirements in the cea708 specification. The most prominent being, that
cea608 triples must be placed at the beginning of each cdp.
We also need to comply with the framerate-dpendent limits for both the
cea608 and the ccp data which may involve splitting or merging some
cea608 data but not ccp data or vice versa.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1116>
Add some properties to allow TCP and UDP candidates to be toggled. This
is useful in cases where someone is using this element in an environment
where it is known in advance whether a given transport will work or not
and will prevent wasting time generating and checking candidate pairs
that will not succeed.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1223>
When negotiating the SDP we should only connect the streams that are
actually mentioned in the SDP. All other streams are not relevant at
this time and would likely be part of a future SDP update. Fixes a
couple of the renegotiation webrtc unit tests.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1240>
Proper calculate running time for buffers that are out of current
segment and try to honor them.
A typical case is for AVTP packets coming from avtpcvfpay element, as
those may have DTS that falls out of segment (which is about PTS).
By using gst_segment_to_running_time_full(), avtpsink can properly
calculate when to transmit those buffers.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1004>
Seek events will cause new segments to be sent to avtpcvfpay, and for
flushing seeks, a pipeline running time reset. This running time
reset, which effectively changes pipeline base time, will cause
avtpcvfpay element to generate incorrect DTS for the initial set of
buffers sent after FLUSH_STOP.
This happens due the fact that base time change happens only when the
sink gets the first buffer after the FLUSH_STOP - so avtpcvfpay used
the wrong base time to do its calculations.
However, if the pipeline is paused before the seek, sink will update
base time when pipeline state goes to PLAYING again, before avtpcvfpay
gets the first buffers after the flush. Then avtpcvfpay element will be
able to normally calculate DTS for the outgoing packets.
This patch simply adds a warning message in case a flushing seek is
performed on a playing pipeline.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1004>
TSN streams are expected to send packets to the network in a well
defined "pace", which is arbitrarily defined for each stream. This pace
is defined by the "measurement interval" property of a stream.
When the AVTP CVF payloader element - avtpcvfpay - fragments a video
frame that is too big to be sent to the network, it currently defines
that all fragments should be transmitted at the same time (via DTS
property of GstBuffers generated, as sink will use those to time the
transmission of the AVTPDU). This doesn't comply with stream definition,
which also has a limit on how many packets can be sent on a given
measurement interval.
This patch solves that by spreading in time the DTS of the GstBuffers
containing the AVTPDUs. Two new properties, "measurement-interval" and
"max-interval-frames", added to avptcvfpay element so that it knows
stream measurement interval and how many AVTPDUs it can send on any of
them. More details on the method used to proper spread DTS/PTS according
to measurement interval can be found in a code commentary inside this patch.
Tests also added for the new property and behaviour.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1004>
If the remote is bundling, but we are not and remote is offering.
we cannot put the remote media sections into a bundled transport as that
is not how we are going to respond.
This specific failure case was that the remote ICE credentials were
never set on the ice stream and so ice connectivity would fail.
Technically, this whole bunde-policy=none handling should be removed
eventually when we implement bundle-policy=balanced. Until such time,
we have this workaround.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1231>
This commit introduces the AVTP Clock Reference Format (CRF) Checker
element. This element re-uses the GstAvtpCrfBase class introduced along
with the CRF Synchronizer element.
This element will typically be used along with the avtpsrc element to
ensure that the AVTP timestamp (and H264 timestamp in case of CVF-H264
packets) is "aligned" with the incoming CRF stream. Here, "aligned" means
that the timestamp value should be within 25% of the period of the media
clock recovered from the CRF stream.
The user can also set an option (drop-invalid) in order to drop any packet
whose timestamp is not within the thresholds of the incoming CRF stream.
This commit introduces the AVTP Clock Reference Format (CRF) Synchronizer
element. This element implements the AVTP CRF Listener as described in IEEE
1722-2016 Section 10.
CRF is useful in synchronizing events within different systems by
distributing a common clock. This is useful in a scenario where there are
multiple talkers who are sending data to a single listener which is
processing that data. E.g. CCTV cameras on a network sending AVTP video
streams to a base station to display on the same screen.
It is assumed that all the systems are already time-synchronized with each
other. So, the AVTP Talker essentially adjusts the AVTP Presentation Time
so it's phase-locked with the reference clock provided by the CRF stream.
There are 2 different roles of systems which participate in CRF data
exchange. A system can either be a CRF Talker, which samples it's own
clock and generates a stream of timestamps to transmit over the network, or
a CRF Listener, the system which receives the generated timestamps and
recovers the media clock from the timestamps. It then adjusts it's own
clock to align with recovered media clock. The timestamps generated by the
talker may not be continuous and the listener might have to interpolate
some timestamps to recover the media clock. The number of timestamps to
interpolate is mentioned in the CRF stream AVTPDU (Refer IEEE 1722-2016
Section 10.4 for AVTPDU structure). Only CRF Listener has been implemented
in this commit.
The CRF Sync element will create a separate thread to listen for the CRF
stream. This thread will calculate and store the average period of the
recovered media clock. The pipeline thread will use this stored period
along with the first timestamp of the latest CRF AVTPDU received to
calculate adjustment for timestamps in the audio/video streams. In case of
CRF AVTPDUs with single timestamp, two consecutive CRF AVTPDUs will be used
to figure out the average period of the recovered media clock.
In case of H264 streams, both AVTP timestamp and H264 timestamp will be
adjusted.
In the future commits, another "CRF Checker" element will be introduced
which will validate the timestamps on the AVTP Listener side. Which is why
a lot of code has been implemented as part of the gstcrfbase class.
If we are in a state where we are answering, we would start gathering
when the offer is set which is incorrect for at least two reasons.
1. Sending ICE candidates before sending an answer is a hard error in
all of the major browsers and will fail the negotiation.
2. If libnice ever adds the username fragment to the candidate for
ice-restart hardening, the ice username and fragment would be
incorrect.
JSEP also hints that the right call flow is to only start gathering when
a local description is set in 4.1.9 setLocalDescription
"This API indirectly controls the candidate gathering process."
as well as hints throughout other sections.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1226>
If we receive video buffers with non-perfect timestamps, the
caption buffers' timestamps might fall in the interval between
the end of one video buffer and the start of the next one.
Make our criteria for dropping that the caption buffer has
a timestamp older than the end of the previous video buffer,
not older than the start of the new one, unless of course
this is the first video buffer.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/-/merge_requests/1207>
Use GST_OBJECT_LOCK (srtobject->element) to protect only the fields
involved in property access.
Introduce a new mutex srtobject->sock_lock to go with
srtobject->sock_cond and protect the list of callers from concurrent
access.
The previous version of the SHM export support still required a valid
EGLDisplay. The upcoming WPEBackend-FDO 1.8.x aims to remove this requirement,
hence allowing wpesrc to be used without GPU.
We should directly check the values of the `debug` and `optimization`
options instead.
`get_option('buildtype')` will return `'custom'` for most combinations
of `-Doptimization` and `-Ddebug`, but those two will always be set
correctly if only `-Dbuildtype` is set. So we should look at those
options directly.
For the two-way mapping between `buildtype` and `optimization`
+ `debug`, see this table:
https://mesonbuild.com/Builtin-options.html#build-type-options
Each srtp_stream_t is tied to an specific SSRC, so a
roc_changed flag should be kept per each SSRC in order to
properly reset RTP sequence number on ROC changes.
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.