Support for (nullable) was added to G-I at the same time as nullable
return values. Previous versions of G-I will not mark return values as
nullable, even when an (allow-none) annotation is present, so it is
not necessary to add (allow-none) annotations for compatibility with
older versions of G-I.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=730957
They are very confusing for people, and more often than not
also just not very accurate. Seeing 'last reviewed: 2005' in
your docs is not very confidence-inspiring. Let's just remove
those comments.
We might not have reached PAUSED yet because of an async error,
but nonetheless we want to make sure that the pads are always
deactivated in READY state.
Every instance of calling bin_do_message_forward() first took the
object lock, so that bin_do_message_forward() could drop it and
then reclaim. Instead, only take the object lock afterward where
needed.
If all stream-start messages had a group id (for backwards compatibility),
we only consider a stream started if all had the same group id.
In 2.0 we should make the group id mandatory.
This makes sure that no bin misses the clock-lost messages, independent
of the state, and could return an old, non-working clock from
gst_bin_provide_clock_func().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701997
Elements should override GstElement::set_context() and also call
gst_element_set_context() to keep this context up-to-date with
the very latest context they internally use.
gst_bin_query() now forwards the query to the source pads as well if
none of the sinks of the bin satisfied the query. This helps in the
case of DURATION queries done a bin containing a source element.
Fixes bug 638749
Add a GST_BIN_FLAG_NO_RESYNC that disables a resync when an element is added,
removed or linked in the bin. This is interesting for complex bins that
dynamically add elements to themselves and want to manage the state of those
elements without interference from resyncs.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690420
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.
Stop querying the duration once an element return unknown and return unknown
as a final result. This avoid eventually cutting off a stream too early.
Add a tests to docuement the behavior.
These changes are to clean up syntax issues such as missing colons,
missing spaces, etc., and minor issues such as argument names in
headers not matching the implementation and/or documentation.
Add the running-time of the buffer that caused the async operation to complete
to the async-done message.
Update bin to handle the new async-done message.
Make the gst_bin_remove_func more like the add_func. Check if the element we try
to remove from the bin has the bin as the parent and set the parent flag to NULL
immediately, this allows us to avoid concurrent remove operations without using
the UNPARENTING element flag. After we unparented the element from the bin, we
update the bin state and remove the element from the list. Finally we unlink
all the pads.
This avoids a race condition where the element could still claim to have the
bin as the parent while the bin didn't have a pointer to the element anymore.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647759
When the bin does an upward state change, try to avoid doing a downward state
change on the child and vice versa.
Add some more unit tests for this fix.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621833
There are many good use cases for GstIndex and we want
to add it back again in some form, but possibly not with
the current API, which is very powerful (maybe too powerful),
but also a bit confusing. At the very least we'd need to
make the API bindings-friendly.
Move the flag to indicate that a new_base_time should be distributed to the
pipeline, from the async_start to the async_done message. This would allow us to
decide when to reset the pipeline time based on other reasons than the
FLUSH_START event.
The main goal eventually is to make the FLUSH events not reset time at all but
reset the time based on the first buffer or segment that prerolls the pipeline
again.
This reverts commit cf4fbc005c.
This change did not improve the situation for bindings because
queries are usually created, then directly passed to a function
and not stored elsewhere, and the writability problem with
miniobjects usually happens with buffers or caps instead.
Some tests (e.g. elements/capsfilter) have pipelines with dangling
sinkpads and without a sink element. These pipelines can never post
an EOS message (because this is only valid by a sink) and as such
should never get an EOS message posted by the bin.
API: GstElement::state_changed
This is always called when the state of an element has changed and
before the corresponding state-changed message is posted on the bus.
Drop in old GstBus code for the release to play it safe, since
regressions that are apparently hard to track down and reproduce
have been reported (on windows/OSX mostly) against the lockfree
version, and more time is needed to fix them.
This reverts commit 03391a8970.
This reverts commit 43cdbc17e6.
This reverts commit 80eb160e0f.
This reverts commit c41b0ade28.
This reverts commit 874d60e589.
This reverts commit 79370d4b17.
This reverts commit 2cb3e52351.
This reverts commit bd1c400114.
This reverts commit 4bf8f1524f.
This reverts commit 14d7db1b52.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647493
This allows to only create the socketpair when it is really required instead
of always creating it and immediately destroying it again for child buses.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647005
This is used by GstBin to create a child bus without
a socketpair because child buses will always work
synchronous. Otherwise too many sockets could be
created and the limit of file descriptors for the
process could be reached.
Fixes bug #646624.
basesrc's default event handler returns TRUE regardless of whether the
event is handled or not. This fixes the handler to conform with the
expected behaviour (which is to only return TRUE when the event has
actually benn handled). gst_bin_do_latency_func() depended on this
(incorrect) behaviour, and is now modified as well.
(Remaining 1-liner change in gstbasesrc.c is to keep gst-indent happy)