x/y/w/h are signed integers. As can be seen in GstCompositorPad.
The prototype for clamp_rectangle was wrong. This commit reverts the change
and fixes the prototype.
This reverts commit bca444ea4a.
CLAMP checks both if value is '< 0' and '> max'. Value will never be a negative
number since it is an unsigned integer. Removing that check and only checking if
it is bigger than max by using MIN().
CID 1320707
The obscured check in compositor was using the dimensions of the pad to clamp
the h/w of the pad instead of the output resolution, and was doing an incorrect
calculation to do so. Fix that by simplifying the whole calculation by using
corner coordinates. Also add a test for this bug which fell through the cracks,
and just skip all the obscured tests if the pad's alpha is 0.0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754107
The ref_object and object parameters were the wrong way around.
For the typical use case where an application is setting a
GstControlBinding on the returned ghost pad:
1. our control binding would be removed when the new one was set
2. sync_values calls were not being forwarded from the internal
pad to the ghost pad.
If an application attempts to perform other control binding
operations (get_* family of functions) on the internal pad, they
will also be forwarded to the ghost pad where a possible
GstControlBinding will provide the necessary values.
Before aggregator based elements always started at running time 0,
now it's possible to select the first input buffer running time or
explicitly set a start-time value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749966
This is used to proxy GstControlBinding to the pad on the
parent object. This avoid having to sync the values in the proxy pad,
this is too early if you have a queue between the pad and the actual
aggregation operation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734060
The problem here was that after removing the formats and
all the things we could convert, we then intersected these
caps with the template caps.
Hence if a subclass offered permissive sink templates
(eg all the possible formats videoconvert handles), but only
one output format, then at negotiation time getcaps returned
caps with the format restricted to that format, even though
we do handle conversion.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751255
When the 'ignore-eos' property is set on a pad, compositor will keep resending
the last buffer on the pad till the pad is unlinked. We count the buffers
received on appsink, and if it's more than the buffers sent by videotestsrc, the
test passes.
When set, it causes videoaggregator to repeatedly aggregate the last buffer on
an EOS pad instead of skipping it and outputting silence. This is useful, for
instance, while playing back files seamless one after the other, to avoid
videoaggregator ever outputting silence (the checkerboard pattern).
It is to be noted that if all the pads on videoaggregator have this property set
on them, the mixer will never forward EOS downstream for obvious reasons. Hence,
at least one pad with 'ignore-eos' set to FALSE must send EOS to the mixer
before it will be forwarded downstream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748946
Add preserve_update_caps_result boolean on the class to allow
sub-classes to disable videoaggregator removing sizes and framerate
from the update_caps() return result.
A return value of GST_FLOW_OK with a NULL buffer from get_output_buffer()
means the sub-class doesn't want to produce an output buffer, so
skip it.
If gst_videoaggregator_do_aggregate() generates an error, make sure
to propagate it - don't just ignore and discard the error by
over-writing it with the gst_pad_push() result.
Rather than one of the input pad video info's.
The test checking this was not constraining the output frame size
to ensure that the out of frame stream was not being displayed.
Without this, we will fixate weird pixel-aspect-ratios like 1/2147483647. But
in the end, all the negotiation code in videoaggregator needs a big cleanup
and videoaggregator needs to get rid of the software-mixer specific things
everywhere.