In order to get some subsegment information, subclasses might want
to download only the headers to have enough data (the index)
to decide where to start downloading from the subsegment.
This allows the subclasses to know if the chunks that are downloaded are
part of the header or of the index and will parse the parts that are
of their interest.
This fixes handling of flushing seeks, where we will get a PAUSED->PLAYING
state transition after the previous one without actually going to PAUSED
first.
Otherwise we will overflow the internal buffer of the hardware
with useless frames and run into an error. This is necessary until
this bug in basesink is fixed:
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742916
Ensure that we do not trust the bitstream when filling a table
with a fixed max size.
Additionally, the code was not quite matching what the spec says:
- a value of 3 broke from the loop before adding an entry
- an unhandled value did not add an entry
The reference algorithm does these things differently (7.3.3.1
in ITU-T Rec. H.264 (05/2003)).
This plays (apparently correctly) the original repro file, with
no stack smashing.
Based on a patch and bug report by André Draszik <git@andred.net>
decklinkvideosink might be added later to the pipeline, or its state might
be handled separately from the pipeline. In which case the running time when
we (last) went into PLAYING state will be different from the pipeline's.
However we need our own start time to tell the Decklink API, which running
time should be displayed at the moment we go to PLAYING and start scheduled
rendering.
klass->setup (scope) will always return TRUE since all children of this class
do so, no need to store the return. Besides, the value is overwritten a few
lines down before it is used.
Change helps keep files in sync after:
-base commit a91d521a36
ret is assigned but not used and in the next cycle of the loop it is overwritten
with default_prepare_output_buffer (). If there is a flow error the function
should return instead.
CID #1226475
Value from left_luminance is assigned to out_luminance here, but that stored
value is not used before it is overwritten in the next cycle of the loop.
Removing assignation.
CID #1226473
found is initialized to FALSE to then only be used in two conditional statements
that will always be false, making the blocks inside them dead code. Looking back
in the file's history the setting of the variable's value before it is checked
was dropped as part of the port to 0.11, bringing that value setting back.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742638