Guard against a hostile child process that sends bogus data
due to memory corruption by adding a magic number to each packet,
and limit the maximum size of any message to 32MB
When trying to find a function plugin-scanner, include a check on the
version of the binary registry chunks it sends, to make sure it's
what we understand.
Add a simple version check when starting the plugin-scanner so we can
verify we're talking to one that talks the same language.
First try a plugin-scanner in the installed path, then try one via the
GST_PLUGIN_SCANNER env var if that doesn't work.
Update the uninstalled script.
Install the plugin-scanner to the libexec dir
When updating the registry, we don't need to re-read the registry cache
and waste time replacing all our existing, hopefully identical, plugins
and features that we're about to re-scan anyway.
phase 2 - make the plugin loader receive the list of plugins to load and
send back the results asynchronously, so we don't context switch back
and forth so much.
Apparently the sed that ships on Solaris 10 doesn't support character
classes like [:alnum:], so don't use them. We don't need them for the
symbol names that are being extracted anyway.
Also, use $(SED) instead of 'sed'
Fixes: #596877
GMP only uses "unsigned long int", which is 32 bit
on 32 bit architectures and can't hold a guint64.
This resulted in false unit test failures on 32 bit architectures.
Fixes bug #595133.
The structure_change message was originally emitted on source pads and
then recently changed to be sink pads. This causes a failure in the
gst-python testsuite. Disable the restriction so that the published
behaviour is still allowed.
Also parse the nano of the version and assume that X.Y.Z-1.1 >= X.Y.Z
With this change we can also check development versions against the version of
the upcomming release.
This is available in newer gcc releases and it should only exist
on platforms that provide some native 128bit integer arithmetic
instructions.
The x86-64 assembly for this is still kept for non-gcc compilers
that don't provide __uint128_t magic.