We had a problem with negotiation of the framerate.
Gstreamer was querying the FRAMEINTERVALS based on the max frame size
instead of the desired frame size.
This was resulting in non-negotiated errors when trying to run with a
smaller frame size and fps higher than the max for the max image size.
Fx the max framerate for 1024x1024 RGB on CMOSIS4000 is 28.292
While for 1024x100 RGB it is 280.867
But Gstreamer would allow any framerates bigger than 28.292 no matter
the frame size used...
I have fixed it by 1st changing the CAPS query to use the minimum frame
size instead of maximum.
This however has the downside of allowing gstreamer to negotiate
framerates that are too high if the image size is bigger than the
minimum.
This is not a huge problem since our driver just CLAMPS the fps value to
the max then.
However gstreamer was not being properly notified of this change, and
would therefore report a wrong fps in the CAPS structure.
Note that the fps would be correct inside the buffer info.
Since gstreamer was reading the fps back after setting it.
It was just not being "propagated" to the CAPS structure.
I have also added a WARNING to this point so we can see if the fps that
gstreamer tries to apply was accepted or not.
And the next part of the fix was to add a framerate check after the
frame size has been established.
I did this inside the fixate_caps function of the v4l2src, which was
calling the TRY_FMT in order to check if the format was correct.
So I just added a check for the ENUM_FRAMEINTERVALS in there.
And now we get the non-negotiated again if the fps is too high for the
selected frame size.
Also added a couple of warnings so it is easy to see that this was the
cause.
See:
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/issues/3037
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7850>
But also don't wait for a buffer on both pads, which might take forever in case
of gaps in one of the streams.
The muxer can only advance the time if it has a timestamped buffer that can be
output, otherwise it will just busy-wait and use up a lot of CPU.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7871>
Some special videos with mlv fourcc can't be recognized by
qtdemux when the subtype of the video is vide instead of
m1v, and will cause negotiation error in subsequent plugin.
So make the handle in qtdemux_video_caps. It might be better
than nothing.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7855>
There is no point in having an endian marker on 8 bit bayer format names since
it is just one byte. Thus remove it.
This also fixes an incompatibility with plugins bad where there is no endian
marker on 8 bit bayer format names as well.
Fixes: #3729
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7826>
The `reuse` property end up setting the SO_REUSEADDR socket option for
the UDP socket. This setting have surprising effects.
On Linux systems the man page (`socket(7)`) states:
```
SO_REUSEADDR
Indicates that the rules used in validating addresses supplied
in a bind(2) call should allow reuse of local addresses. For
AF_INET sockets this means that a socket may bind, except when
there is an active listening socket bound to the address.
```
But since UDP does not listen this ends up meaning that when an
ephemeral port is allocated (setting the `port` to `0`) the kernel is
free to reuse any other UDP port that has `SO_REUSEADDR` set.
Tests checking the likelyhood of port conflict when using multiple
`udpsrc` shows port conflicts starting to occur after ~100-300 udpsrc
with port allocation enabled. See issue #3411 for more details.
Changing the default value of a property is not a small thing we risk
breaking application that rely on the current default value. But since
the effects of having `reuse` default `TRUE` on can also have damaging
and hard-to-debug consequences, it might be worth to consider.
Having `SO_REUSEADDR` enabled for multicast, might have some use cases
but for unicast, with dynamic port allocation, it does not make sense.
When not using an multicast address we will disable port reuse if the
`port` property is set to 0 (=allocate) and warn the user that we did
so.
Closes#3411
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7841>
The gst_dep.get_variable('libexecdir') may fail in some scenarios
(e.g. building a module alone inside an uninstalled devenv) and
it shouldn't really be reached in the first place if docs are
disabled via options.
Also to avoid confusing meson messages when cross-compiling or
doing a static build.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7818>
Previously the wrapping of the 24-bit reference time was not handled
correctly when transforming it into GstClockTime. Given the unit of 64ms
the span that could be represented by 24 bits is 12 days and depending
on the start value we could get a wrapping problem anytime within this
time frame. This turned out to be particularly problematic for the GCC
algorithm in gst-plugins-rs which tried to evict old packages based on
the "oldest" timestamp, which due to wrapping problems could be in the
future. Thus, the container managing the packets could grow without
limits for a long time thereby creating both CPU and memory problems.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7527>
If a stream has an 'irregular' frame rate (e.g. metadata) RTCP SR
may be generated way too early, before the RTPSource has received
the first packet after Latency was configured in the pipeline.
We skip such RTPSources in the RTCP generation.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7740>
Some servers (e.g. Axis cameras) expect the client to propose the encryption
key(s) to be used for SRTP / SRTCP. This is required to allow re-keying so
as to evade cryptanalysis. Note that the behaviour is not specified by the
RFCs. By setting the 'client-managed-mikey-mode' property to 'true', rtspsrc
acts as follows:
* For a secured profile (RTP/SAVP or RTP/SAVPF), any media in the SDP
returned by the server for which a MIKEY key management applies is
elligible for client managed mode. The MIKEY from the server is then
ignored.
* rtspsrc sends a SETUP with a MIKEY payload proposed by the user. The
payload is formed by calling the 'request-rtp-key' signal for each
elligible stream. During initialisation, 'request-rtcp-key' is also
called as usual. The keys returned by both signals should be the same
for a single stream, but the mechanism allows a different approach.
* The user can start re-keying of a stream by calling SET_PARAMETER.
The convenience signal 'set-mikey-parameter' can be used to build a
'KeyMgmt' parameter with a MIKEY payload.
* After the server accepts the new parameter, the user can call
'remove-key' and prepare for the new key(s) to be served by signals
'request-rtp-key' & 'request-rtcp-key'.
* The signals 'soft-limit' & 'hard-limit' are called when a key
reaches the limits of its utilisation.
This commit adds support for:
* client-managed MIKEY mode to srtpsrc.
* Master Key Index (MKI) parsing and encoding to GstMIKEYMessage.
* re-keying using the signals 'set-mikey-parameter' & 'remove-key' and
then by serving the new key via 'request-rtp-key' & 'request-rtcp-key'.
* 'soft-limit' & 'hard-limit' signals, similar to those provided by srtpdec.
See also:
* https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3830
* https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4567
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7587>
Move RB info from receiver reports into the internal source that the RR
are about, and deprecate (but retain) the old mapping where each
external source has only a single RB entry in the rtp statistics.
The old method is broken if a remote peer uses a single ssrc to send
receiver reports for more than one of our internal sources, other
as multiple RB in a single packet, or alternate RB in different reports.
In each case only the most recent entry was kept, overwriting data for
other internal sources.
In multicast scenarios each internal source may receive multiple
receiver reports from different peers. To support that, all received
RR's are now stored into a hash table indexed by the sender's SSRC,
and all RRs are placed into an array when generating statistics, so
that the information from all peers is retrievable.
The current deficient behaviour (adding RB info into non-internal RTPSources) is
deprecated but kept in order to be backward compatible, and retained
that way in the generated statistics structure.
Refs
[1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc3550#section-6.4.1
Based on a patch by Fede Claramonte <fclaramonte@twilio.com>
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7424>
A zero-sized box is not really a problem and can be skipped to look at any
possibly following ones.
BMD ATEM devices specifically write a zero-sized bmdc box in the sample
description, followed by the avcC box in case of h264. Previously the avcC box
would simply not be read at all and the file would be unplayable.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7564>
This notably follow the way we order the template and keeps the
format:Interlaced caps at the end. This change also fixes
an early skip check, that would skip if a driver only supports
alternate interlacing for a specific format. It also fixes
a bug where only the last resolution of a discrete frame size
was allowed to use format:Interlaced. Finally, similar to template
caps code, simplify the caps for earch featurs, making the debug output
manageable and (marginally) improve negotiation speed.
This change will make it easier to introduce memory:DMABuf.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7540>
In qml6glsrc, we capture the application by copying the back buffer into
our own FBO. The afterRendering() signal is too soon as from the apitrace, the
application has been rendered into a QT internal buffer, to be used as a cache
for refresh.
Use afterFrameEnd() signal instead. This works with no delay on GLES. With GL
it seems to reduce from 2 to 1 frame delay (this may be platform specific). A
different recording technique would need to be used to completely remove this
delay.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7351>