Now that we no longer support all methods for all formats, we
need to cater for that in the transform function: we can't
transform formats not supported by the currently-selected
mehod.
make check, folks. It's da bomb.
Flesh out the video filter base class. Make it parse the input and output caps
and turn them into GstVideoInfo. Map buffers as video frames and pass them to
the transform functions.
This allows us to also implement the propose and decide_allocation vmethods.
Implement the transform size method as well.
Update subclasses with the new improvements.
With the new video bufferpool we can now implement the propose_allocation
vmethod on some video filter elements so that we can also use video metadata and
bufferpools when not operating in passthrough mode.
Adds a Lanczos-derived scaling method, which is rather slow, but very
high quality. Adds a few properties that can be used to tune various
scaling properties: sharpness, sharpen, envelope, dither. Not currently
Orcified, but was designed with that in mind.
Make a new GstVideoFormatinfo structure that contains the specific information
related to a format such as the number of planes, components, subsampling,
pixel stride etc. The result is that we are now able to introduce the concept of
components again in the API.
Use tables to specify the formats and its properties.
Use macros to get information about the video format description.
Move code to set strides, offsets and size into one function.
Remove methods that are not handled with the structures.
Add methods to retrieve pointers and strides to the components in the video.
Remove the GstVideoPlane structure and move the fields directly into the
GstVideoInfo structure. This makes things a little easier to read and also makes
it more likely that we can pass the stride array to external libraries.
If the second and next caps structures are a subset of the already existing
transformed caps we can safely skip them because we would transform them to
the same caps again.
When fixating caps, from_par should always be initialized
with a fixed value.
In case the fixation is from src to sink pad it was setting
the from par (srcpad par) to a fraction range, this patch initializes
it to 1/1, based on the assumption that missing PAR is 1/1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=641952
Otherwise we're producing different caps and basetransform thinks that it
can't passthrough buffer allocations, etc.
In 0.11 all video caps really should have the PAR set...
This behaviour was not preferred and caused visible image quality
degradations. The real solution would be, to apply a real
deinterlacing filter before scaling the frames.
Fixes bug #615471.