When no data is coming from sinkpads and eos events
arrived at one of the sinkpad, funnel forwards the EOS
event to downstream. It forwards the EOS because lastsink pad
is NULL. Also the unit testcase of the funnel is not checking
the correct behavior as it should. The unit test case should
fail if one of the sink pad has already EOS present on it and
we are trying to push one more EOS.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731716
Otherwise negative values will sets all of the 64 bits due to two's
complement's definition of negative values.
Also add a test for negative int ranges.
When a pad is added the need-parent flag is set to true, so when
they are removed the flag should be set back to false
This was preventing GstPads to be reused in elements (removed and
later re-added). A unit tests was added to verify that this is
working now.
The use case is tsdemux that has a program-number property and
allows the user to switch programs. In order to do that tsdemux
will remove the pads of the current program and add from the new
ones. The removed pads are kept in the demuxer for later if the
user selects the old program again.
Adds a utility struct that is capable of storing and aggregating flow returns
associated with pads.
This way all demuxers will have a standard function to use and have the
same expected results.
Includes tests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709224
Stores the last result of a gst_pad_push or a pull on the GstPad and provides
a getter and a macro to access this field.
Whenever the pad is inactive it is set to FLUSHING
API: gst_pad_get_last_flow_return
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709224
Currently there is no other way to unlock a buffer pool other then
stopping it. This may have the effect of freeing all the buffers,
which is too heavy for a seek. This patch add a method to enter and
leave flushing state. As a convenience, flush_start/flush_stop
virtual are added so pool implementation can also unblock their own
internal poll atomically with the rest of the pool. This is fully
backward compatible with doing stop/start to actually flush the pool
(as being done in GstBaseSrc).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727611
When we call gst_buffer_pool_set_config() the pool may return FALSE and
slightly change the parameters. This helper is useful to do the minial required
validation before accepting the modified configuration.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727916
If a pool config is being configured again, check if the configuration have changed.
If not, skip that step. Finally, if the pool is active, try deactivating it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728268
Keep it simple. Likely also makes things easier for bindings,
and efficiency clearly has not been a consideration given how
the existing code handled these lists.
In order to be deterministic, multiple waiting GstClockIDs needs to be
released at the same time, or else one can get into the situation that
the one being released first can add itself back again before the next
one waiting is released.
Test added for new API and old tests rewritten to comply.
From the test case:
/* This test creates a multiqueue with 2 streams. One receives
* a constant flow of buffers, the other only gets one buffer, and then
* new-segment events, and returns not-linked. The multiqueue should not fill.
*/
If one of the queues goes EOS and the other returns NOT_LINKED the stream
can be considerered EOS as a NOT_LINKED means that one of the branches has no
sink downstream that will block the EOS message posting.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725917
Tag allocated buffers with TAG_MEMORY. When they are released later,
only add them back to the pool if the tag is still there and the memory
has not been changed, otherwise throw the buffer away.
Add unit test to check various scenarios.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724481
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