Changing states up and down while buffers are being pushed is not
a valid use case. If a pad is deactivated and reactivated during
a buffer push it is racy with the check of pushed sticky events
and the actual chainfunction call. As it might call the chain
without noticing the peer pad lost its previous sticky events.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758340
Iterator may need to be resynced, for instance if pads are released
during state change.
got_eos should be protected by the object lock of the element, not of
the pad, as is the case throughout the rest of the funnel code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755343
Writing a test for unscheduling the gst_clock_id_wait inside the
identity element, found an invalid read, caused by removing the clock-id
when calling _unschedule instead of letting the code calling _wait remove
the clock-id after being unscheduled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752055
Update test_seeking testcase to verify the render and render_list
virtual method handle buffers and buffer list containing multiple
memory blocks correctly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747223
GstFileSink implements the render_list virtual method to render
a list of buffers. Update the test_seeking test case to also
check the render_list method implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747100
This property avoids not linked error when all the pads are unlinked
or when there are no source pads. This is useful in dynamic pipelines
where it can happen that for a short time there are no pads at all or
all downstream pads are not linked yet.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746436
3 new tests:
1) Tests that a stream that is empty (just an EOS event)
on inactive pad doesn't get through and tamper
with the active pad that still has data
2) Tests that a stream that is shorter than the active one
(pushes EOS earlier) doesn't has its EOS pushed
3) Tests that switching to an inactive stream that has received
EOS will make input-selector push EOS
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746518
Demultiplex a stream to multiple source pads based on the stream ids from the
stream-start events. This basically reverses the behaviour of funnel.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707605
In this mode we accept previously set filter caps until
upstream renegotiates to something that is compatible
to the current filter caps.
This allows dynamic caps changes in the pipeline even
if there is a queue between any conversion element
and the capsfilter. Without this we would get not-negotiated
errors if timing is bad.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739002
Make pipe socket non-blocking, so we don't
end up being blocked in a write on the pipe
while the src is eos and not reading data
any more, and thus we never unblock and never
notice that we're done. This would happen
quite reliably on the rpi.
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
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
The check itself is racy.
(CK_FORK=no GST_CHECK=test_output_order make elements/multiqueue.forever).
The problem is indeed the test and not the actual element behaviour.
The objects to push are being pulled out of the single internal queues in the
right order and at the right time...
But between:
* the moment the global multiqueue lock is released (which was used to detect
if we should pop and push downstream the next buffer)
* and the moment it is received by the source pad (which does the check)
=> another single queue (like the unlinked pad) might pop and push a buffer
downstream
What should we do ? Putting a bigger margin of error (say 5 buffers) doesn't
help, it'll eventually fail.
I can't see how we can detect this reliably.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708661
Implement the same behaviour as gst_pad_push_event when pushing sticky events
fails, that is don't fail immediately but fail when data flow resumes and upstream
can aggregate properly.
This fixes segment seeks with decodebin and unlinked audio or video branches.
Fixes: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687899
Make it so that one can specify a buffer for get/pull_range where the downstream
element should write into. When passing NULL, upstream should allocate a buffer,
like in 0.10.
We also need to change the probes a little because before the pull probe, there
could already be a buffer passed. This then allows us to use the same PROBE
macro for before and after pulling.
While we're at the probes, make the query probe more powerful by handling the
GST_PAD_PROBE_DROP return value. Returning _DROP from a query probe will now
return TRUE upstream and will not forward the probe to the peer or handler.
Also handle _DROP for get/pull_range properly by not dispatching to the
peer/handler or by generating EOS when the probe returns DROP and no buffer.
Make filesrc handle the non-NULL buffer passed in the get_range function and
skip the allocation in that case, writing directly into the downstream provided
buffer.
Update tests because now we need to make sure to not pass a random value in the
buffer pointer to get/pull_range
Conflicts:
gst/gstindexfactory.c
libs/gst/base/gstbasetransform.c
plugins/elements/gstfakesink.c
plugins/elements/gstfakesrc.c
plugins/elements/gstidentity.c
plugins/elements/gstinputselector.c
plugins/elements/gstoutputselector.c
Note: did not merge any of the basetransform changes from 0.10.
Calling set_caps at that point is not useful in 0.10 (FIXME comment!), and in
0.11 it is totally pointless: the caps event doesn't stick to a flushing pad.
Add the pad mode to the activate function so that we can reuse the same function
for all activation modes. This makes the core logic smaller and allows for some
elements to make their activation code easier. It would allow us to add more
scheduling modes later without having to add more activate functions.
Remove the getcaps function on the pad and use the CAPS query for
the same effect.
Add PROXY_CAPS to the pad flags. This instructs the default caps event and query
handlers to pass on the CAPS related queries and events. This simplifies a lot
of elements that passtrough caps negotiation.
Make two utility functions to proxy caps queries and aggregate the result. Needs
to use the pad forward function instead later.
Make the _query_peer_ utility functions use the gst_pad_peer_query() function to
make sure the probes are emited properly.
Make a new GstPadProbeInfo structure and pass this in the probe callback. This
allows us to add more things later and also allow the callback to replace or
modify the passed object.
Make a separate cookie to detect chancges in the list of probes and keeping
track of what hooks have been invoked yet.
Remove the requirement to have probes on srcpads in push mode and sinkpads in
pull mode.
Add some more debug.
Keep track of what callbacks got executed. If no callback is called and we are a
blocking pad, let the item pass. This allows you to block pads on selected
items only.
Explicitly have an UPSTREAM and DOWNSTREAM PadProbeType. This allows you to only
block the pad on upstream or downstream items.
Add convenience macros to only block on downstream/upstream items.
Better now than later in the cycle. These might come in handy:
sed -i -e 's/GstProbeReturn/GstPadProbeReturn/g' `git grep GstProbeReturn | sed -e 's/:.*//' | sort -u`
sed -i -e 's/GST_PROBE_/GST_PAD_PROBE_/g' `git grep GST_PROBE_ | sed -e 's/:.*//' | sort -u`
sed -i -e 's/GstProbeType/GstPadProbeType/g' `git grep GstProbeType | sed -e 's/:.*//' | sort -u`