In case of overlay being completely or partially outside
the video frame, the offset calculations are not right,
which resulted in the overlay not being displayed as
expected, or crashes due to invalid memory access.
When the overlay rectangle is completely outside,
we need not render the overlay at all.
For partial display of overlay rectangles, src_yoff
was not being calculated, hence it was always clipping
the bottom half of the overlay, By calculating the
src_yoff, now the overlay is clipped properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739281
Make an ORC version of the 2x vertical upsampling code.
Improve unit tests, test chroma up and down sampling.
memset buffer in conversion to make valgrind happy.
Combine multiplies in 4x filters.
Rename conversion functions to make them nicer in orc.
Add ORC versions for various downsampling algorithms
Add unit test chroma resampler
We only need to do the horizontal subsampling on 1 line if we do it
after vertical subsampling and we also avoid doing vertical subsampling
on unused pixels.
Rework the converter, keep track of the conversion steps by chaining the
cache objects together. We can then walk the chain and decide the
optimal allocation pattern.
Remove the free function, we're not going to need this anytime soon.
Keep track of what output line we're constructing so that we can let the
allocator return a line directly into the target image when possible.
Directly read from the source pixels when possible.
We need to allocate the templine with the amount of pixels we are going
to handle, which we only know for the vertical resampler when we are
asked to resample.
Add scaler functions for 16 bits formats.
Rename the scaler functions so that 16bits versions don't look too
weird.
Remove old unused h_2tap functions
Fix v_ntap functions, it was using 1 tap too little.
Rework the way we track the current state of the video through the
different conversion phases and use this to make sure we use the right
format and pstride where needed.
A faster version of 4tap horizontal scaling causes segfaults in ORC
presumably because it uses too many registers so disable it to avoid
crashing in the ORC tests.
video-scaler.c:151:58: error: implicit conversion from enumeration type
'GstVideoScalerFlags' to different enumeration type
'GstVideoResamplerFlags' [-Werror,-Wenum-conversion]
gst_video_resampler_init (&scale->resampler, method, flags, out_size,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~~~~
Only apply an offset that is a multiple of the subsampling. To handle
arbitrary offsets in the future, we need to be able to chroma-resample
part of the borders.
Add support for cropping the source and placing the converted image
into a rectangle in the destination frame.
Add an option to add a border and border color.
Add the old ORC functions for nearest and linear. Label them as Low
quality because they are not as accurate but ORC lacks opcodes to
express this for now.
Add a video scaler object build on top of the resampler. It has
implementation to deal with interlaced video as well as horizontal and
vertical scaling functions.
Use a LineCache object to track and process lines between unpack,
upsample, convert, downsample and pack stages. This simplifies the
main core processing function a lot and allows for future additions
easily.
Add support for interlaced formats in chroma up and downsampling.
There are some few but certain conditions where it is possible for the
dest_width to be smaller than x. So we check this before assigning a negative
value to src_width, which is a unsigned and would be promoted to a number that
can segfault videoblend.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738242
This was never reset when going from PAUSED->READY and resulted
in encoders being not reusable after EOS. They just rejected any
buffer because they received EOS in their previous life.
The flag wasn't used anywhere except for rejecting buffers after
EOS, and this is now handled by GstPad directly.
Move the conversion code used in videoconvert to the video library
and expose a simple but generic API to do arbitrary conversion. It can
currently do colorspace conversion but the plan is to add videoscale to
it as well.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732415
Reset last_timestamp_out when applying the output segment
change, to avoid decoder confusion over new timestamp timelines when
a seamless segment change happens.
Move some locks/unlocks to later when they're actually needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734617
This fixes the reverse playback scenario when upstream is not fully
parsing the stream and does not send every keyframe chain separately
with the DISCONT flag on the keyframe.
To explain this, let's suppose we have this stream:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
K K K
In most circumstances, the upstream parser will chain in the
decoder the buffers in the following order:
6 7 8 3 4 5 0 1 2
D D D
In this case, GstVideoDecoder will flush the parse queue every time
it receives discont (D) and we will eventually get in the output queue:
(flush here) 8 7 6 (flush here) 5 4 3 (flush here) 2 1 0
In case the upstream parser doesn't do this work, though,
GstVideoDecoder will receive the whole stream at once and will flush
the parse queue afterwards:
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
D
During the flush, it will look backwards for keyframes and will
decode in this order:
6 7 8 3 4 5 0 1 2
This is the same order that it would receive from upstream if
upstream was parsing and looking for the keyframes, only that now
there is no flushing of the output queue in between keyframes,
which will result in the output queue looking like this:
2 1 0 6 5 3 8 7 6
This will confuse downstream obviously and will play incorrectly.
This patch forces the decoder to flush the output queue every time
it picks a new keyframe to decode, so it will end up decoding 6 7 8
and then flushing before picking 3 for decoding, so the output will
get 8 7 6 before 6 5 3 and the video will play back correctly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734441