Leave kCVOpenGLESTextureCacheMaximumTextureAgeKey to the default (1s). We used
to set it to 0 and flush manually, but apparently (looking at the GLES profiler)
0 means "disable the cache entirely".
Invoke the callback right away when called on the context thread. Removes
overhead when nesting libgstgl calls (for example when working with the sync
meta).
This allow adding rtmpsink after the flv streaming have started. Otherwise,
FLV streamheader is never sent to the server, which cannot figure-out
what is this stream about. It should also help in certain renegotiation
figures. The sink will no longer work without an streamheader in caps,
though there is no known implementation of flvdemux that does not
support this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760242
stream->current_fragment has the value of g_list_previous (iter) which has
just been checked. No need to check it again.
Just to be safe, use a g_assert() to check fragment before dereferencing.
CID #1352041
The function actually returns the segment availability start time (as defined by the standard).
That is at the end of the segment, but it is called availability start time.
Availability end time is something else (the time when the segment is no longer
available on the server). The function name was misleading.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757655
The demux_sent_eos callback is unused in tests. It was also registered on
a wrong pad, so it actually triggered when demux received eos from a
fragment download.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760328
CPU waits are more expensive and are only required if the CPU is ever going to
access the data. GPU waits perform inter-context synchronisation and are cheaper
as they don't require CPU intervention.
Adds unit tests similar to the ones that we have for DASH and HLS.
Tests:
* manifest parsing finishes successfully
* some queries (duration, seekable, latency)
* seeking with various values and flags
Similar to HLS but DASH has the extra issue that it can have
multiple streams so snapping can be tricky as streams usually
won't be aligned.
For now, those tests handle the case of only having a single
stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759158
Adaptive demuxers need to start downloading from specific positions
(fragments) for every stream, this means that all streams can snap-seek
to a different position when requested. Snap seeking in this case will
be done in 2 steps:
1) do the snap seeking on the pad that received the seek event and
get the final position
2) use this position to do a regular seek on the other streams to
make sure they all start from the same position
More arguments were added to the stream_seek function, allowing better control
of how seeking is done. Knowing the flags and the playback direction allows
subclasses to handle snap-seeking.
And also adds a new return parameter to inform of the final
selected seeking position that is used to align the other streams.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759158
Since commit b77f8e172a the new value
assigned to mview_mode hasn't been used. That commit changed the following
"if" check to an "else if", which means the original value of mview_mode
is used.
All uses of query->context in gstglquery.c assume it exists. We can assume
this as well before unrefing it. Furthermore, gst_object_unref() will just
silently return if it ever were to not exist.
When converting from avc to byte-stream, there will not be any codec_data
in the src caps. Remove it before the equality check to avoid sending caps
events downstream on every SPS/PPS change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761014
If we have a stream that contains an unchanging SPS/PPS for every video frame,
we don't need to to constantly query downstream for it's supported caps if the
current caps are compatible with the negotiated caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761014