If an rtx packet arrives that hasn't been requested (it might
have been requested from prior to a reset), ignore it so that
it doesn't inadvertently trigger a clock skew.
In the case of reordered packets, calculating skew would cause
pts values to be off. Only calculate skew when packets come
in as expected. Also, late RTX packets should not trigger
clock skew adjustments.
Fixes#612
mpegaudioparse suggests MP3 needs 10 or 30 frames of lead-in (depending on
mpegaudioversion, which we don't know here), thus provide at least 30 frames
lead-in for such cases as a followup to commit cbfa4531ee.
The pre_push_frame default clipping behaviour was introduced in 2010
with commit 30be03004e and modified with commit 4163969a24 in 2011,
when most parsers didn't implement a pre_push_frame yet. Not having it
meant that clipping was done by default. Those that did implement a
pre_push_frame (flacparse and mpegaudioparse) at the time, had the flag
adjusted as part of the 2011 refactor work.
All other parsers got a pre_push_frame vfunc implementation only in
2013, but seem to have forgot to keep the clipping behaviour, as
was done automatically when a pre_push_frame implementation doesn't
exist for the parser. aacparse lost it with commit 91d4abcea in
July 2013; the others in Dec 2013 as part of AUDIO_CODEC tag posting
in commits 6f89b430e, d2ab5199b, 29f2cae12, 753d3c23a and 292780574.
Otherwise it can happen that we receive a caps event, then another caps
event and only then buffers. We would then send out the first caps event
in the stream but mark buffers with the caps version of the second caps
event.
Otherwise it can happen that we already collected 7 caps, miss the 8th
caps packet (packet loss) and then re-use the 1st caps for the following
buffers instead of the 8th caps which will likely cause errors further
downstream unless both caps are accidentally the same.
Keeping old caps around does not seem to have any value other than
potentially causing errors. We would always receive new caps whenever
they change (even if they were previous ones) and it's very unlikely
that they happen to be exactly the same as the previous ones.
Also after having received new caps or a buffer with a next caps
version, no buffers with old caps version will arrive anymore.
Make sure to clear any master clock on the media_clock
before unreffing it to release the timer callback that's
updating the clock and keeping it reffed.
Clear the mastering_display_info_present field explicitly
after reallocating the track context into a video context
to avoid uninitialised warnings in valgrind
If, say, a rtx-packet arrives really late, this can have a dramatic
effect on the jitterbuffer clock-skew logic, having it being reset
and losing track of the current dts-to-pts calculations, directly affecting
the packets that arrive later.
This is demonstrated in the test, where a RTX packet is pushed in really
late, and without this patch the last packet will have its PTS affected
by this, where as a late RTX packet should be redundant information, and
not affect anything.
This patch corrects the delay set on EXPECTED timers that are added when
processing gaps. Previously the delay could be too small so that
'timout + delay' was much less than 'now', causing the following retries
to be scheduled too early. (They were sent earlier than
rtx-retry-timeout after the previous timeout.)
Turns out that the "big-gap"-logic of the jitterbuffer has been horribly
broken.
For people using lost-events, an RTP-stream with a gap in sequencenumbers,
would produce exactly that many lost-events immediately.
So if your sequence-numbers jumped 20000, you would get 20000 lost-events
in your pipeline...
The test that looks after this logic "test_push_big_gap", basically
incremented the DTS of the buffer equal to the gap that was introduced,
so that in fact this would be more of a "large pause" test, than an
actual gap/discontinuity in the sequencenumbers.
Once the test was modified to not increment DTS (buffer arrival time) with
a similar gap, all sorts of crazy started happening, including adding
thousands of timers, and the logic that should have kicked in, the
"handle_big_gap_buffer"-logic, was not called at all, why?
Because the number max_dropout is calculated using the packet-rate, and
the packet-rate logic would, in this particular test, report that
the new packet rate was over 400000 packets per second!!!
I believe the right fix is to don't try and update the packet-rate if
there is any jumps in the sequence-numbers, and only do these calculations
for nice, sequential streams.
gst_splitmux_src_activate_part() configures the pad information
before starting the pad task, but occasionally the changes it makes
to the pad are not seen in the pad task because they're not
protected by the right locking. Use the pad's object lock to
protect those variables.
Fix a deadlock around the pads list by using an RW lock to
allow simultaneous readers. The pad list doesn't really changes
except at startup and shutdown.
Make the debug output less confusing by not mentioning a src
pad when doing calculations on the sink pad side.
Improve debug around why a GOP is considered overflowing a fragment
AAC and various other audio codecs need a couple frames of lead-in to
decode it properly. The parser elements like aacparse take care of it
via gst_base_parse_set_frame_rate, but when inside a container, the
demuxer is doing the seek segment handling and never gives lead-in
data downstream.
Handle this similar to going back to a keyframe with video, in the
same place. Without a lead-in, the start of the segment is silence,
when it shouldn't, which becomes especially evident in NLE use cases.
In this change we now protect the internal srcpads list using the
stream lock and limit usage of the internal stream lock to
preventing data flowing on the other src pad type while creating
and signalling the new pad.
This fixes a deadlock with RTPBin shutdown lock. These two locks would
end up being taken in two different order, which caused a deadlock. More
generally, we should not rely on a streamlock when handling out-of-band
data, so as a side effect, we should not take a stream lock when
iterating internal links.
This means we can use some newer features and get rid of some
boilerplate code using the G_DECLARE_* macros.
As discussed on IRC, 2.44 is old enough by now to start depending on it.
It must be accurate for all samples to work in Final Cut properly, so
the best we can do is to assume that all samples are the same as the
first. Bigger samples are truncated, smaller samples are padded.
This takes the timestamp of the earliest stream and offsets it so that
it starts at 0. Some software (VLC, ffmpeg-based) does not properly
handle Matroska files that start at timestamps much bigger than zero.
Closes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-good/issues/449
There is only a single sink element in async-finalize mode, and we would
keep the running time from previous fragments set in that case. As we
don't ever set the running time for the very last fragment on EOS, this
would mean that the closing time reported for the very last fragment is
the same as the closing time of the previous fragment.
This is a tiny clarification as the storage was loosely named "storage".
This change clarify that the storage is specificaly used for received RTP
packets. This is unlike the storage found in rtprtxsend that stores a
backlog of sent RTP packets.
We recently added code to remove outdate NACK to avoid using bandwidth
for packet that have no chance of arriving on time. Though, this had a
side effect, which is that it was to get an early RTCP packet with no
feedback into it. This was pretty useless but also had a side effect,
which is that the RTX RTT value would never be updated. So we we stared
having late RTX request due to high RTT, we'd never manage to recover.
This fixes the regression by making sure we keep at least one NACK in
this situation. This is really light on the bandwidth and allow for
quick recover after the RTT have spiked higher then the jitterbuffer
capacity.
The second udpsrc (rtcp) might not have seen the segment event if it was
not enabled or if rtcp is not available on the server. So if the
application tries to send an EOS event it will try to set an invalid
seqnum to the event.
Right now, we may call on-new-ssrc after we have processed the first
RTP packet. This prevents properly configuring the source as some
property like "probation" are copied internally for use as a
decreasing counter. For this specific property, it prevents the
application from disabling probation on auxiliary sparse stream.
Probation is harmful on sparse streams since the probation algorithm
assume frequent and contiguous RTP packets.
Scaletempo doesn't support non-interleaved layout. Not explicitely stating this
would trigger critical warnings and a caps negotiation failure when scaletempo
is used as playbin audio-filter.
Patch suggested by George Kiagiadakis <george.kiagiadakis@collabora.com>.
Fixes#591
Fix doc chunks to not use that syntax for links that have the
url as description, it will be put verbatim into the xml/*.xml
file and then the expat parser will throw a syntax error like:
File "../../common/mangle-db.py", line 71, in <module>
main()
File "../../common/mangle-db.py", line 69, in main
patch (details.replace("-details", ""), os.path.basename(details))
File "../../common/mangle-db.py", line 20, in patch
doc = xml.dom.minidom.parse(related)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/dom/minidom.py", line 1918, in parse
return expatbuilder.parse(file)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/dom/expatbuilder.py", line 924, in parse
result = builder.parseFile(fp)
File "/usr/lib/python2.7/xml/dom/expatbuilder.py", line 207, in parseFile
parser.Parse(buffer, 0)
xml.parsers.expat.ExpatError: not well-formed (invalid token): line 84, column 7
If the incoming frame buffer has GST_BUFFER_FLAG_DISCONT set this should
be preserved and set for the first output buffer too, like other
payloaders do.
Spotted with gst-validate-1.0 when adding integration tests for
rtpsession, a minimal test to reproduce the issue is:
$ gst-validate-1.0 videotestsrc num-buffers=1 ! rtpvrawpay ! identity ! fakesink
Starting pipeline
Pipeline started
warning : Buffer didn't have expected DISCONT flag333 speed: 1.000000 />
Detected on <identity0:sink>
Detected on <identity0:src>
Detected on <fakesink0:sink>
Description : Buffers after SEGMENT and FLUSH must have a DISCONT flag
Issues found: 1
=======> Test PASSED (Return value: 0)
This introduce a new signal on RTSession, on-sending-nacks is emited
right before the list of seqnums to be nacked are processed and
transformed into FB Nack. This allow implementing custom nacks
handling through another mechanism with APP feedback.
In order to do that, we now split the nacks registration from the actual
FB nack packet construction. We then try and add as many FB Nacks as
possible into the active packets and leave the remaining seqnums in the
RTPSource. In order to avoid sending outdated NACK later on, we save the
seqnum calculated deadline and cleanup the outdated seqnums before the
next RTCP send.
Fixes#583
Calling rtp_session_send_rtcp before marking the source as requiring a
pli/fir/nack meant the rtcp_thread could be scheduled and start running
before the source was updated. This meant the request would not be sent
early but instead was transmitted with the next regular RTCP packet.
Add test for nack generation.
If the current time is equal to the early rtcp time deadline, there is
no need to schedule a timer. This ensure that immediate feedback is
really immediate and simplify implementing unit tests with the test
clock, which stops perfectly on the timeout time.
This fix has been extracted from Pexip feature patch called
"rtpsession: Allow instant transmission of RTCP packets"
When used in combination with a rtponviftimestamp element
downstream, forwarding this flag ensures it gets correctly
serialized in the ONVIF header extension.
A missing colon after G_DEFINE_TYPE declaration was confusing gst-indent
and causing problem in the pre-commit hook.
Add the missing colon and fix the following function declaration to
follow the normal GStreamer style.
One comments in gst_rtp_session_chain_send_rtp_common() is referring to
groups in a buffer list, however this concept of "group" comes from
GStreamer 0.10 and does not exist anymore in GStreamer 1.0, so update the
comment to refer to buffers instead.
The update_receiver_stats() function is called also when sending packets
in rtp_source_send_rtp(), and sending packets may happen using a buffer
list rather than individual buffers.
So update the stats using the actual number of packets sent.
NOTE: this is fine for the receive path too (rtp_process_send_rtp)
because the receive path does not support buffer lists and
pinfo->packets would always be equal to 1 in this case.
This is needed for the case you don't know in advance all the sessions
you will be using, but would like to place all the related AUX element
in the same GstBin. As per current implementation, each time an sender
AUX bin is requested and returned, RTPBin will walk the src pads and
create sessions for these pads.
In the current implementation, if a src pad already have a sessions, it
returns an error and stops. As a side effect, if an AUX bin is reused in
a following AUX bin request, it can only work if the pads are created on
the last request.
This change simply relax the restriction in order to keep walking, and
just ensure that all newly created pads have a sessions.
Need to respect return of gst_video_guess_framerate() to ensure
non-zero denominator.
This patch is to fix below error with an abnormal (but has valid frame) file.
(gst-play-1.0:17940): GStreamer-CRITICAL **: passed '0' as denominator for `GstFraction'