dynlink_* was introduced since CUDA Toolkit 9.x but it's deprecated from 10.0.
Instead of using #ifdef hack, shipping nvidia headers of NVIDA CODEC SDK
can make build/code simple
MediaSDK has been released as open source [1], but the directories
where it installs its files, are different from the binary only
distribution.
This patch adds to the libraries path the directory /lib. Also it
is defined in meson if the include directory has the mfx/ prefix,
something that is already handled in autotools.
1. https://github.com/Intel-Media-SDK/MediaSDK
"required" keyword is not a valid argument for has_header()
WARNING: Passed invalid keyword argument "required".
WARNING: This will become a hard error in the future.
These function are not used at all, using them together with the
transport-volume property from avdtpsrc may end up in a binding loop so
we better remove the functions.
If properties are proxied through GBinding this can work only if the
proxied property keeps it's own value. The previous implementation will
read the original value if the proxied property signals a change and
thus nothing will happen.
Right now this only works for video. An attempt was made at adding
monitoring following the example winks, but it seems the only devices that
can be easily detected are KS sources, which winks already handles.
The previous behaviour had issues when setting one of the device properties
after _get_caps had been called. The device shouldn't be locked in until after
_start has been called.
the 2018.3.1 intel sdk release places libraries into /lib64 instead of
/lib/lin_x64 or /lib/x64, this commit adds /lib64 to the libdir
locations list
Fixes#815
Before this patch, if mode=auto and video-format!=auto, video-format would
always be ignored, and get set to 8bit-yuv, or if detected to be RGB444, then
it would be set to 8bit-argb. This change respects video-format if it is set
to 10bit-yuv (v210) or 8bit-bgra, even when mode=auto.
Closes#772
There's a race condition when is-live is set to true and the shmsrc
element releases the pipe in the transition from PLAYING to PAUSED.
To avoid it this change ensures that _create method takes the pipe
and increases the use_count in one operation protected by object lock.
Also perform apropriate protections when releasing the pipe.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797203
../sys/decklink/gstdecklinkvideosink.cpp:1006:11: error: ‘GstDecklinkVideoSink {aka struct _GstDecklinkVideoSink}’ has no member named ‘scheduled_stop_time’
self->scheduled_stop_time = start_time;
^
Decklink sometimes does not notify us through the callback that it has
stopped scheduled playback either because it was uncleanly shutdown
without an explicit stop or for unknown other reasons.
Wait on the cond for a short amount of time before checking if scheduled
playback has stopped without notification.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797130
This is part of a much larger goal to always keep the frames we schedule to
decklink be always increasing. This also allows us to avoid using both the
sync and async frame display functions which aren't recomended to be used
together.
If the output timestatmsp is not always increasing decklink seems to hold
onto the latest frame and may cause a flash in the output if the played
sequence has a framerate less than the video output.
Scenario is play for N seconds, pause, flushing seek to some other position,
play again. Each of the play sequences would normally start at 0 with
the decklink time. As a result, the latest frame from the previous sequence
is kept alive waiting for it's timestamp to pass before either dropping
(if a subsequent frame in the new sequence overrides it) or displayed
causing the out of place frame to be displayed.
This is also supported by the debug logs from the decklink video sink
element where a ScheduledFrameCompleted() callback would not occur for
the frame until the above had happened.
It was timing related as to whether the frame was displayed based
on the decklink refresh cycle (which seems to be 16ms here),
when the frame was scheduled by the sink and the difference between
the 'time since vblank' of the two play requests (and thus start times
of scheduled playback).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797130