If we can't find a valid granule near the end of the file, we
disable seeking. This guards against the whole file being then
read and never going to PLAYING.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=770314
https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson
With contributions from:
Tim-Philipp Müller <tim@centricular.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.
This workaround tried to avoid an EOS event when seeking to the
end of an Ogg stream in order to find its duration. At some point,
an EOS event there would cause any queue2 upstream to pause and
not restart on a seek back to the beginning. This now appears to
not be the case anymore, and so the workaround can be removed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767689
If the duration is not known from the chain, it might be known
by the startup seek.
This fixes failure to seek.
Merged with a patch from Tim-Philipp Müller <tim@centricular.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768991
Dropping a buffer because we have a seek pending is normal,
and will now happen when we trigger a seek while going through
the packets in a page. So this should not be an error.
A low bitrate stream which can pack more than 2 seconds of audio
in a page would cause the stream's position to be updated not
often enough, and would trigger a spurious "jump" via a GAP
event. Instead, we update the stream position after calculating
the new overall segment position.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764966
... instead of relying on the segment. For the clipping at the start we assume
a proper value in the OpusHead, as generated by opusparse or opusenc.
Transmuxing in general is not guaranteed to produce the correct values, or
even have a OpusHead (e.g. when having RTP input).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
The granulepos does not have the pre-skip subtracted while timestamps do,
and the last granulepos will be shorter by the number of samples that should
be dropped because of padding in the end.
As such, extrapolating the granule of the beginning of the first frame will
lead to a negative value, which is not a problem but intentional.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
This reverts commit 76647f2710.
Avoiding pull mode activation is a feature regression, and
demuxers should always use pull mode where that is possible,
e.g. if there's an upstream queue2 with a ring buffer or
a download buffer.
This patch made reverse playback no longer possible over http.
If the goal is to minimise seeks, then that can still be done
by making the demuxer behave differently in pull mode if
the SEQUENTIAL flag is set. If there are bugs, like the demuxer
needlessly scanning the entire file on start-up in pull mode,
then those should be fixed instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746010
gst_event_replace() takes its own reference on the event so we should drop
ours after creating and storing an event using it.
This fix leaks which can be reproduced using the
validate.http.media_check.vorbis_theora_1_ogg scenario.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748247
When a stream has a skeleton index, the stream time is taken from that
index. However, when part of the stream is captured, the index is
invalid as its offsets are now wrong. To avoid this, we ignore the index
when the last offset points beyond the end of the stream (when its
byte length is known).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744070
oggmux keeps a cached buffer per pad, and pulls buffers from
collectpads to this cached buffer for all pads before processing
the best pad. In some cases, the move from collectpads buffer
to cached buffer is delayed till next call. However, when there
is only one pad, this can't be delayed till next call as there
will be a deadlock since collectpads has no other pad to push to.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740565
gstoggdemux.c:1233:11: error: format specifies type 'long' but the argument has type 'ogg_int64_t' (aka 'long long') [-Werror,-Wformat]
granule);
^~~~~~~
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746512
The code that was calculating the start granule from packet durations
was interpreting a negative value as an error, but this is actually a
valid case, to indicate clipping of data at start.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743900
If we get EOS when we're trying to build a chain, we disable seeking
and continue instead of posting an error. This can happen for corner
cases such as a stream with a video that stops before the end, for
instance.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745980
When looking for pages when seeking, we stop looking for non sparse
streams if we don't find one within a given threshold. This fixes
seeking filling up queues and blocking in corner cases such as an
audio file with a pathological 1 frame video stream (yes, I saw one).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745980
This will usually deadlock, despite this patch being in master for
quite some time and working fine. Nevertheless, we deem it to be
not working, disregarding facts.
As such, we fix it by keeping track of seek events, and sending
them upstream from a separate thread. Buffers are then discarded
till we get a new segment with the expected seqnum.
READY->PAUSED can be too early as souphttpsrc can get the HTTP
headers after this. Try again in the chain function.
Also use seeking query to disable seeking if upstream reports
being unseekable.
Some resetting code has to be done in the NEW_SEGMENT
event handler, instead of the missing FLUSH_STOP one.
Segment base was also wrongly accounted for. This was hidden
by the fact that flushing resets the base.
A discontinuity is now also signalled on seeking. We have to
also ensure that the discontinuity "sticks" till a buffer
with a valid timestamp goes out, or the audio decoder base
class will ignore the discontinuity for purposes of keeping
track of the current time.
This allows using non flushing segment seeks for looping
HTML audio in particular, and more generally non flushing seeks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729198
The code was using the first nonnegative granulepos to seed the
granule tracking, which appeared to work since headers have zero
granulepos. However, this does not work for files with a hole at
start, which are common in live streaming.
The correct behavior is to look for the first granule, and subtract
the duration of all the packets finishing on this page.
The function which does this relies on the fact that the ogg_stream
structure can be duplicated by shallow copy, in order to pull the
packets from the first page(s) on the copy without affecting the
original stream state.
If the streaming task attempts to read a chain while the pipeline
is stopping (which can happen if the pipeline stops shortly after
start or a new URI being setup in gapless playback case), it will
see a flushing return from upstream, and should then also return
flushing to the caller, rather than emit a flow error.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722442
It might happen that the timestamp is before the segment and the
check would succeed. In this case reducing the duration makes no
sense and would lead to broken results.
The previous code was setting keytarget to target
to make sure the keyframe found for each pad was
indeed before the target.
Then if target == keytarget, it assumed a keyframe had been
found, which was not the case if target was before the first frame
in the file.
This patch checks that a keyframe was indeed found, and if not
seeks to 0, without bisecting again.
Assuming default gst qa assets in $HOME/gst-validate
seek_before_first_frame.scenario:
description, seek=true, handles-states=true
pause, playback-time=0.0
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.0, flags=accurate+flush
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.01, flags=accurate+flush
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.1, flags=accurate+flush
GST_DEBUG=*theoradec*:2 gst-validate-1.0 playbin \
uri=file://$HOME/gst-validate/gst-qa-assets/medias/ogg/vorbis_theora.0.ogg \
--set-scenario seek_before_first_frame.scenario
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741097
Samples may be clipped at the end, and this is conveyed by a
granulepos that's smaller than it would otherwise be. Use the
segment stop time to detect this, and calculate the right
granulepos.
Setting segment.base in the segment sent from gst_ogg_demux_handle_page() is
enough to ensure that chained oggs are played corretly (see bgo#706569).
Tweaking the base in gst_ogg_pad_submit_packet() as well result in delays when
playing a file with start != -1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735808
Base time should be accumulated so non flushing seeks have the expected base.
Not accumulating result in segments appearing as "too late" and so are not
played by the sink.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735509
This lets oggdemux determine they are not delta units, and removes
spurious per packet warnings about being unable to determine the
packet's keyframeness.
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.
This should not cause any actual bug since Theora and Daala have
a maximum shift of 31, and a packet duration of 2^31 seems very
implausible. But it fixes:
Coverity 1139804, 1139803, 1139802
Add an extra function to the oggstream map to inform it about
the incoming buffers. This way oggmux can keep a count on the
vp8 invisible frames and calculate the granulepos correctly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722682
vp8 stream header shouldn't be assumed to be provided in caps always
as this would repeat the same code in all demuxers/encoders. Instead,
make oggmux generate them if they are not supplied.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722682
When seeking back to original state after duration seeks, let
upstream know that we want the whole file, including the last
byte that wasn't requested on the duration seeks.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724633
A change in gst_ogg_demux_do_seek caused oggdemux to wait for
a page for each of the streams, including a skeleton stream if
one was present. Since Skeleton only has header pages, that
was never going to end well.
Also, the code was skipping CMML streams when looking for pages,
so would also have broken on CMML streams.
Thus, we change the code to disregard Skeleton streams, as well
as discontinuous streams (such as CMML and Kate). While it may
be desirable to consider Kate streams too (in order to avoid
losing a subtitle starting near the seek point), this may be
a performance drag when seeking where no subtitles are. Maybe
one could add a "give up" threshold for such discontinuous
streams, so we'd get any page if there is one, but do not end
up reading preposterous amounts of data otherwise.
In any case, it is important that the code that determines
the amount of streams to look pages for remains consistent with
the "early out" conditions of the code that actually parses
the incoming pages, lest we never decrease the pending counter
to zero.
This fixes seeking on a file with a skeleton track reading all
the file on each seek.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=719615
Ogg data is read chunk by chunk, and the chunk size used was
originally taken from libvorbisfile. However, this value leads
to poor performance when used on an Ogg file with large pages
(Ogg pages can be close to 64 KB).
We can't just use a larger chunk size, since this will decrease
performance on small page streams, so we use an adaptive scheme
where the chunk size is twice the largest page size we've seen
so far in the stream. For "typical" Ogg/Vorbis, this gives us
almost the same chunk size (a bit lower), and this lets us get
better performance on streams with large pages.
Store the seek stop and seqnum and properly restore them when
receiving the corresponding Segment from upstream. Also fixes
seqnum for converted seek events.
When bisecting after an earliest time has been found, we need
to only consider the stream for which the earliest time was found.
Before, the following scenario could be and was encountered:
a) Find the earliest time for stream X
b) bisect and find a page which granuletime is indeed < target, but
contains another stream.
c) decide to seek at the wrong offset, sometimes inferior to
the real one, in which case the error was undected or
d) the offset was superior, and thus the actual target keyframe was
not processed, and packets were skipped waiting
for a granulepos.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700537
The problem experienced is that the EOS was never emitted by oggmux during a
rendering with GES. The proposed patch checks if the pad is EOS before deciding
it's the "best pad".
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699792
If our previous flow return was NOT_LINKED, don't try to push on the pads some
more. If we get a RECONFIGURE event on the pad, try to push on it again.
Changed the check to a current_time equal to the stop will produce
EOS instead of the next one. Also, segment.start can't be NONE, so removing
this check.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696899