Otherwise it can happen that we receive a caps event, then another caps
event and only then buffers. We would then send out the first caps event
in the stream but mark buffers with the caps version of the second caps
event.
When used in combination with a rtponviftimestamp element
downstream, forwarding this flag ensures it gets correctly
serialized in the ONVIF header extension.
The payloader didn't copy anything so far, the depayloader copied every
possible meta. Let's make it consistent and just copy all metas without
tags or with only the video tag.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751774
Put a 0-byte at the end of the event string. Does not break ABI because
old depayloaders will skip the 0 byte (which is included in the length).
Expect a 0-byte at the end of the event string or a ; for old
payloaders.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737591
We can't use the clock to time our config-interval because we are not
live (or there might not be a clock or the clock might not be running).
Instead just simply take the timestamp diff.
This is to make sure tags are cleared on the client if the
stream-start was previously lost, otherwise, the client may end
up with a merged taglist of multiple songs
This is useful in case the packet containing the inlined caps was lost
or if new client joins an already running RTP stream and they missed
the previous tag events.
This also makes the payloader keep a list of merged tags so the retransmitted
tag event contains all previously received. A STREAM_START event will
flush the list of tags.
This is necessary to fix event/caps sending. If we send a STREAM_START
packet, it will cause an error because the stream didn't receive its
caps and new-segment events, so we must wait for the first buffer before
sending the stream-start event buffer. However, the caps will be sent
at the same time and so the 'inline caps' will be set for the event.
We need to be able to payload individual packets (data, caps or events)
and only send them when we call flush.
Caps events are sometimes not followed by a buffer but by an event. Flush any
pending caps before we make a packet with the event.
Chain up to the parent event handler before we attempt to push RTP packets, it
might be a segment event.
We currently only send tags and custom events. The other events
might interfere with the receiver timings or are otherwise handled
by RTP.
Conflicts:
gst/rtp/gstrtpgstpay.c
Use adapter to assemble the payload and make a flush function to
turn this payload into (fragmented) packets.
Conflicts:
gst/rtp/gstrtpgstpay.c
gst/rtp/gstrtpgstpay.h
Set the C flags on all the fragments instead of only those with
caps in them. This makes it easier in the receiver to check if there
is a caps in the assembled fragments just by looking at the last RTP
packet flags.
Place the capsversion on the outgoing caps so that they end up in
an SDP as well. Receivers need to know what capsversion a particular
caps is for to be able to match the caps to the CV in the RTP packets.
Place the caps inside the RTP packet whenever the caps change.
Based on patch by Andrzej Bieniek <andrzej.bieniek@pure.com>
Conflicts:
gst/rtp/gstrtpgstpay.c
gst/rtp/gstrtpgstpay.h
GCC 4.6.x spits warnings about variables that are unused but set. Such
variables have been removed where trivial but with comments left behind
for informational purposes in some cases.
gst_rtp_session_chain_recv_rtcp () was changed in commit 490113d4
to always return GST_FLOW_OK instead of the return value of
rtp_session_process_rtcp (), so we'll keep it that way.