Without this, for streams where the content is stored indefinitely and
can be seeked on, the duration would never increase when in paused or,
until we reached near the end of the currently advertised stream (where
the internal fragment parser would see descriptions of new fragments).
The TTML spec has an issue in which tab (U+0009) characters that are
first in a sequence of whitespace characters are not suppressed at the
start and end of line areas. This issue was reported in [1] and the
editor of the TTML specs confirmed that this was not the intention
behind the spec.
The editor has created an issue to fix this in both the TTML1 and TTML2
specs [2], giving a proposal of what the spec should say. This patch
updates ttmlparse to implement the intended behaviour as proposed, in
which tabs in the input are converted to spaces before processing.
[1] https://github.com/w3c/imsc/issues/224
[2] https://github.com/w3c/ttml1/issues/235https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781539
If multiple styles/regions with the same ID are present in the input
(which is not allowed in TTML), use the last and give a warning.
Fixes CID #1405134.
This is basically a frame counter provided by the driver and it's
advancing at the speed of the HDMI/SDI input. Having this available on
each buffer allows to know what constant-framerate-based timestamp each
frame is corresponding to and can be used e.g. to write out files
accordingly without having the local pipeline clock timestamps used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779213
Clang's static analyser found potential code paths in which variables
were being used in comparisons when uninitialised. Fix by properly
handling out-of-range value returned by gst_ttml_get_element_index.
The previous code was handling both as separate steps and then tried to
combine the results, but this resulted in all kinds of bugs which showed
themselves as failures during seeking and offset tracking getting wrong.
This also showed itself with gst-validate on the sample stream.
The rewritten code now parses everything in one go and tracks the
current offset only once, and as a side effect simplifies the code a
lot.
Also added is detection of SIDX that point to other SIDX instead of
actual media segments, e.g. with this stream:
http://dash.akamaized.net/dash264/TestCases/1a/sony/SNE_DASH_SD_CASE1A_REVISED.mpd
Support for this will have to be added at some point but that should
also be easier with the rewritten code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781233
Spec 5.3.9.2 is saying about the existence of duration and SegmentTimeline
only for Representation level. Other level such as Period or AdaptationSet
might not have the attributes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780570
Some actions (Qos, reconfigure, ...) might take place before we finish pushing out flush_start.
One problem would be that:
1) The QOS handling in adaptivedemux takes the MANIFEST LOCK
That QOS event comes from basesink with its PREROLL_LOCK taken
2) FLUSH_START is sent from adaptivedemux with the MANIFEST_LOCK taken and the basesink flushing handler needs to take the PREROLL_LOCK
=> deadlock
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781320
Allow 1 extra char in the tmp buffer where the motion cell
snippets are generated, so that it doesn't leave off a comma
when dealing with cells that have 2 numerals in both indices
Don't hide build behind --enable-experimental. Our goal is to not
autoplug it for now, so let's just always build it if the dependencies
are there and hide autoplugging enablement behind an env var.
This reverts commit c9fbf3459a.
The representation ID comparision here was wrong and triggering always
if the ID did *not* change, causing needless redownloading of the
header. The sample stream provided in the bug does not exist anymore.
This reverts commit 6d256d9908.
It was configuring the period/buffer size in a way that often causes
drop-outs or complete underruns. Needs further investigation.
"meson encountered an error in file
sys/decklink/meson.build, line 33, column 2:
Invalid use of addition: must be str, not list"
Also remove nonsensical linker flags on windows.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781156
Otherwise we'll get into an infinite loop here. Now this is still not
correct and will cause a clean error, but at least it won't hang forever
anymore.
meson's configure_file emits only a comment like /* #undef ... */
for values which are unset in the configuration_data. For
gstglconfig.h, this differs from the autotools build where the
preprocessor definitions are always either 0 or 1. So loop over a
list of variables to set to zero as default.
Also sync up the gstglconfig.h.meson file with the additional
macros defined by the autotools build.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781043
Windows aren't always removed in time, and it turns out to be
very, very hard to remove a window in a way that's not racy and
not deadlocky. Since the window itself doesn't leak, freeing
the list on object destruction is enough.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781018
At the moment that demux is waiting manifest update, the target sequence
of fragment was advanced already. So, checking stream_has_next_fragment()
means looking for the next fragment of target fragment.
This might cause unexpected buffering if each fragment has
large duration and manifest is listing only limited number of fragments.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780494
For each period, media presentation is the relative to the
period-start time. So SIDX seek position should be target seek
position minus period-start. Also, if presentationTimeOffset
is defined, the value should be compensated
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780397