Previously the default and full modes were the same. Now the default
mode is like before: it accumulates all buffers in a buffer list until
the threshold is reached and then writes them all out, potentially in
multiple writes.
The new full mode works by always copying memory to a single memory area
and writing everything out with a single write once the threshold is
reached.
If buffer lists with too many buffers would be written before, a stack
overflow would happen because of memory linear with the number of
GstMemory would be allocated on the stack. This could happen for example
when filesink is configured with a very big buffer size.
Instead now move the buffer and buffer list writing into the helper
functions and at most write IOV_MAX memories at once. Anything bigger
than that wouldn't be passed to writev() anyway and written differently
in the previous code, so this also potentially speeds up writing for
these cases.
For example the following pipeline would crash with a stackoverflow:
gst-launch-1.0 audiotestsrc ! filesink buffer-size=1073741824 location=/dev/null
What may happen is that during the course of processing a buffer,
all of the pads in a flow combiner may disappear. In this case, we
would return NOT_LINKED. Instead return whatever the input flow return
was.
The old code would leave a dangling pointer in oldstr_ptr if two threads
attempted to take the same structure into the same location at the same
time:
1. First "oldstr == newstr" check (before the loop) fails.
2. Compare-and-exchange fails, due to a second thread completing the
same gst_structure_take.
3. Second "oldstr == newstr" check (in the loop) succeeds, loop breaks.
4. "oldstr" check succeeds, old structure gets freed.
5. oldstr_ptr now contains a dangling pointer.
This shouldn't happen in code that handles ownership sanely, so check
that we don't try to do this and complain loudly.
Also simplify the function by using a do-while loop, like
gst_mini_object_take.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/413
When this `_strnlen` internal method was added, strnlen (in glibc)
was not available yet (appeared in 2.10 it was released that same
year).
If available, use the much more optimized strnlen
The type checks at the end of `gst_value_intersect` to call the flagset
intersection are relatively expensive.
If we already know that:
* There was a compare function but it didn't return GST_VALUE_EQUAL
* AND none of the registered intersect functions failed
Then we know they can't intersect and can return early.
Trims ~20% of the instruction calls
For subtracting a list from another, the previous implementation would
do a double subtraction of one from another (which would create temporary
arrays/values which would then be discarded). Instead iterate and do
the comparision directly.
For intersecting a list with another, we can directly iterate both at
once and therefore avoid doing a *full* check of all values of the list
against all other values of the list.
This tries to inline as much as possible array/list and its contents
in order to avoid double allocation/freeing. This also improves the
locality of data.
The internal value is still API/ABI compatible with the *public*
GArray structure. This allows READ-ONLY backwards compatibility with
any external users that assume that the content of a list/array value
is backed by a GArray.
In case the buffer is not writable, the parent (the BufferList) is not
removed before calling func. So if it is changed, the parent (the BufferList)
of the previous buffer should be removed after calling func.
For all the structure creation using valist/varargs we calculate
the number of fields we will need to store. This ensures all callers
will end up with a single allocation.
Instead of having 3 allocations:
* One for GstStructure
* One for GArray
* One for the array *within* GArray
We try to limit this to a single allocation, inlining everything. This
reduces the number of micro-allocations and improves locality of data
access.
Before that commit `{test, }` wouldn't be accepted as an array
because of the trailing coma, the commit fixes that.
At the same time, the code has been refactored to avoid special casing
the first element of the list, making `{,}` or `<,>` valid lists.
We kept the start time around and subtracted it everywhere for "easy of
debugging", but we don't do anything like this anywhere else and it
only complicates the code unnecessarily.
fixate() will return empty caps if it gets empty caps passed and assert
early if any caps are provided as there's no meaningful way of fixating
any caps.
truncate() and simplify() will return the input caps in case of
any/empty caps as before, but slightly optimized and as documented
behaviour.
Also add tests for this and a few other operations behaviour on
empty/any caps.
gst-inspect-1.0 segfaults on tracing logs where it fails to find
element stats. So on the pipelines where we get the following WARNING
during execution will afterwards crash with a segfault as the
g_ptr_array has a index for it but it is just a NULL pointer.
WARN default gst-stats.c:444:do_message_stats: no element stats found for ix=X
An example of an pipeline which can reproducibly create a trace log
where this occurs would be this
GST_DEBUG="GST_TRACER:7" GST_TRACERS="stats;rusage;latency" gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc num-buffers=120 ! autovideosink &> trace.log
gst-stats-1.0 trace.log
The clocksync element is a generic element that can be
placed in a pipeline to synchronise passing buffers to the
clock at that point. This is similar to 'identity sync=true',
but because it isn't GstBaseTransform-based, it can process
GstBufferLists without breaking them into separate GstBuffers
We do not have a way to know the format modifiers to use with string
functions provided by the system. `G_GUINT64_FORMAT` and other string
modifiers only work for glib string formatting functions. We cannot
use them for string functions provided by the stdlib. See:
https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Basic-Types.html#glib-Basic-Types.description
F.ex.:
```
../tools/gst-stats.c:921:11: error: too many arguments for format [-Werror=format-extra-args]
printf ("Number of Buffers passed: %" G_GUINT64_FORMAT "\n", num_buffers);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
../tools/gst-stats.c:922:11: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
printf ("Number of Events sent: %" G_GUINT64_FORMAT "\n", num_events);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In file included from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86_64/include/glib-2.0/glib/gtypes.h:32,
from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86_64/include/glib-2.0/glib/galloca.h:32,
from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86_64/include/glib-2.0/glib.h:30,
from ../gst/gst.h:27,
from ../tools/tools.h:28,
from ../tools/gst-stats.c:30:
/builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86_64/lib/glib-2.0/include/glibconfig.h:69:28: note: format string is defined here
#define G_GUINT64_FORMAT "llu"
^
```
and
```
../tests/misc/netclock-replay.c: In function 'main':
../tests/misc/netclock-replay.c:98:23: error: unknown conversion type character 'l' in format [-Werror=format=]
if (sscanf (line, "%" G_GUINT64_FORMAT " %" G_GUINT64_FORMAT " %"
^~~
In file included from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86/include/glib-2.0/glib/gtypes.h:32,
from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86/include/glib-2.0/glib/galloca.h:32,
from /builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86/include/glib-2.0/glib.h:30,
from ../tests/misc/../../libs/gst/net/gstntppacket.c:38,
from ../tests/misc/netclock-replay.c:31:
/builds/nirbheek/cerbero/cerbero-build/dist/windows_x86/lib/glib-2.0/include/glibconfig.h:69:28: note: format string is defined here
#define G_GUINT64_FORMAT "llu"
^
```
This is needed for upgrading glib inside Cerbero which builds with
`-Werror` on Windows:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/cerbero/merge_requests/419
Seems unnecessary to print the parent name for every
element in the pipeline graph, it's clear from the
graph what the parent element is and it's hard to
imagine a case where this is useful info rather than
just distracting spam. So far this was only done for
pads, but we should just do it for everything.
When the user sets filters, we should not trace ref counts of object that
are not traced. This optimizes the tracer by potentially avoiding
generating useless backtraces.
Previously we would use the object lock only for storing the sync
handler and its user_data in a local variable, then unlock it and only
then call the sync handler. Between unlocking and calling the sync
handler it might be unset and the user_data be freed, causing it to be
called with a freed pointer.
To prevent this add a refcounting wrapper struct around the sync
handler, hold the object lock while retrieving it and increasing the
reference count and only actually free it once the reference count
reaches zero.
As a side-effect we can now also allow to actually replace the sync
handler. Previously it was only allowed to clear it after initially
setting it according to the docs, but the code still allowed to clear it
and then set a different one.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/issues/506