We usually first create the stream_id for the stream_start event and then add
the pad to the element. This means that this functions should work when there
are no pads on the element yet.
define GLIB_DISABLE_DEPRECATION_WARNINGS earlier so that it is defined before
the glib headers are loaded or else we trip over the GValueArray deprecations in
gst-inspect.c.
Recheck for sticky events after doing a pad block because the pad block could
have caused a relink and then we need to resend the events to the newly linked
pad.
Fixes things like switching of visualisations.
The duration should be re-queried via a query using the
normal path, we don't want applications to use the value
from the message itself, since it might no match what a
duration query done from the sink upstream might yield.
Also disables duration caching in GstBin. It should be
added back again at some point.
When making a copy of the memory allocated from the default memory allocator,
make sure the new copy has the same alignment as the original memory.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680796
We only deal in TIME format ourselves, but if the subclass can handle
converting other formats into TIME format, we can support that too.
Fixes seeking in DEFAULT (sample) format with flacparse,
and the flacdec unit test.
Elements such as the GstIirEqualizerNBands would so far not store the properties
of their children. Now we also grab the properties of child elements and try to
restore them.
Only one STREAM_START event should be let through, else it will
confuse downstream elements that think a new stream is starting
whereas in fact we are just switching to a different input.
In the future we might want to let them through but with the same
sequence number.
Sometimes a transform filter would need the buffer pool or the memory
allocator negotiated by the base class, for example, for querying different
parameters, such as a bigger number of buffers to allocate by the buffer pool.
This patch expose a two getters accessors: one for the buffer pool and the
other for the memory allocator.
Sometimes the sources would use the buffer pool or the memory allocator for
something else than just allocating output buffers; for example, querying for
different parameters, such as a bigger number of buffers to allocate by the
pool.
This patch expose a two getters accessors: one for the buffer pool and the
other for the memory allocator.