Currently tsdemux timestamps only the PTS, and only issues the DTS if
it's different. In that case, parsers tend to estimate the next DTS
based on the previous DTS and the duration, which can accumulate
rounding errors.
Packets of a given PID are meant to have sequential continuity counters
(modulo 16). If there are not sequential, this is the sign of a broken
stream, which we then consider as a discontinuity.
But if that new packet is a frame start (PUSI is true), then we can resume
from that packet without any damage.
This went un-noticed for 6 years :( The issue is that for short
sections (without subtables and CRC), we would always fail when
checking whether we had enough data or not and then default to the
long section checking.
Use the long section checking would then cause interesting side-effects
for short sections (such as believing they were already seen and therefore
would be dropped/ignored).
Allows for "low latency" mpeg-ts mode which is not standard, but somewhat common.
For this to work the sender has to put timestamps at a higher frequency than the spec requires.
PES packets with size 0 are unbounded, and
could therefore overflow the 32-bit size
accumulator.
Add a 32MB limit, which is larger than
any PES packet should ever get. If one does,
then output a 32MB chunk and continue.
Don't signal a pipeline error when processing incomplete
j2pk PES packets that are too small. That can happen normally
during a DISCONT and shouldn't shut down the whole pipeline
Remove some custom and incomplete seek calculation
logic in favour of gst_segment_do_seek(), and
short-circuit any actual seeking or recalculation
if the position didn't change and just send an updated
segment directly.
This removes the custom seeking logic in favour of
using standard core seek handling.
The MPEG-TS packetiser should use the upstream DTS for
skew correction when running in that mode, as the DTS
carries the upstream arrival time. The PTS (if it's
set at all) is less useful, and can be invalid.
Unless we only have sparse streams. In this case we will consider them.
It fixes a bug happening when first observed timestamp comes from a
sparse stream and other streams don't have a valid timestamp, yet. Thus
leading the timestamp from sparse stream to be the start of the
following segment. In this case, if the timestamp is really bigger than
non-sparse stream (audio/video), it will lead the pipeline to clip
samples from the non-parse stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744469
* Avoid copying the pending data and instead create a buffer directly from
that data with the appropriate offset.
* Locate the jp2k magic to determine the exact location of the (first) frame
data instead of assuming that the header is of an expected size
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786111
The jp2k specification (ITU-T T.800) specifies that the 'brat' box
has two fields and the second one (AUF2) can be set to 0 for progressive
streams.
The problem is that the mpeg-ts specification (ITU-T H.222.0 06/2012)
says that the AUF2 field is only present if the stream is interlaced
In order to cope with both situation, accept those next 32bit if the
stream is marked as progressive and those bits contain 0
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=786111
Doing lazy conversion of PCR values doesn't work right
when a PCR discont is encountered. Instead, convert PCR
values to the continuous timestamp domain as soon as we
encounter them and store that instead.
Type cast has higher precedence than bitwise shift, so the third
argument will truncate to 8 bits and then shift right by 8 bits
resulting in constant zero.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774293
This was a regression.
We only have a upstream-id via STREAM_START if we were in push-mode.
In pull-mode we need to create one.
Note: It would be good to eventually have that method (copied from
gst_pad_get_stream_id_internal()) public in the future
For each MpegTSBaseStream, we have a GstStream object which
subclasses can extend with information.
For each program a GstStreamCollection is created with all
GstStream from each stream.
When dealing with TIME-based input, the incoming stream could have
potentially changed completely.
In order to check whether it did or not, we need to re-check all sections
(PAT, PMT...). If it didn't, we will keep using the existing streams/pad,
and if it did we will act as if there was a program switch.
Fixes HLS streaming with decodebin3/playbin3
EAC3 bit streams shall be identified with a stream_type value of 0x87 when
transmitted as PES streams conforming to ATSC-published standards. It is specified
in ATSC Standard A/52.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770528
The headers passed as parametter are relative to the build dir
basically "../subproject/gst-plugins-bad/gst-libs/gst/mpegts/XXX.h"
but that does not match what is needed at build time when building as
subproject, also we always add current dir as include_dir so we are
safe including directly.
And link mpegtsdemux against the 'math' library as it is needed.
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson
With contributions from:
Tim-Philipp Müller <tim@centricular.com>
Matej Knopp <matej.knopp@gmail.com>
Jussi Pakkanen <jpakkane@gmail.com> (original port)
Highlights of the features provided are:
* Faster builds on Linux (~40-50% faster)
* The ability to build with MSVC on Windows
* Generate Visual Studio project files
* Generate XCode project files
* Much faster builds on Windows (on-par with Linux)
* Seriously fast configure and building on embedded
... and many more. For more details see:
http://blog.nirbheek.in/2016/05/gstreamer-and-meson-new-hope.htmlhttp://blog.nirbheek.in/2016/07/building-and-developing-gstreamer-using.html
Building with Meson should work on both Linux and Windows, but may
need a few more tweaks on other operating systems.