Recognize H.264 Level 5.2, as exposed by modern 2160p30+ streams,
i.e. commonly known as 4K. Also add initial support for handling
Annex.G (SVC) profiles.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732269
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
Currently the API is far from optimal and the user has to work around
our badly defined API to simply install missing plugins.
API:
new:
gst_discoverer_info_get_missing_elements_installer_details
deprecated:
gst_discoverer_info_get_misc
gst_discoverer_stream_info_get_misc
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720596
We're checking the caps to see if we got more caps details after a parser got
plugged. This will also have a flipped 'parsed' field. If the field was already
present before the parse the match will fail. Add a function that will do the
check while excluding this field.
Mark terms such as "planar", "packed", and "palettized" as
translatable, and re-arrange strings a bit to make them
better suited for translation.
Also fix bug in yuv descriptions, one plane is packed, more
is planar (or semi-planar).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707789
Caps description and missing plugin code does not really need caps to
be fixed, and indeed they may not be if giving encodebin unfixed caps
that correspond to an unknown encoder or muxer.
So we relax the check, and allow unfixed caps if all the structures
refer to the same media type.
We already have internally the information on what type of stream (audio,
video, container, subtitle, ...) a certain caps is.
Instead of forcing callers to specify which CODEC_TAG category a certain
caps is, use that information to make a smart choice.
Does not break previous behaviour of gst_pb_utils_add_codec_description_to_tag_list
(if tag is specified it will be used, if caps is invalid it will be rejected,
...).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702215
The _1_0 suffixed environment variables override the
non-suffixed ones, so if we're in an environment that
sets the _1_0 suffixed ones, such as jhbuild, we need
to set those to make sure ours actually always get
used.
The behaviour is sensibly changed here. Instead of purely falling when a
preset is set on the #GstEncodingProfile, we now make sure that the
element that is plugged corresponds to the one specified as preset. Then,
if we have a preset_name, we use it, if it fails, we fail (we might rather
just keep working even without setting the element properties?)
+ Add tests that it behave correctly