The clocksync element is a generic element that can be
placed in a pipeline to synchronise passing buffers to the
clock at that point. This is similar to 'identity sync=true',
but because it isn't GstBaseTransform-based, it can process
GstBufferLists without breaking them into separate GstBuffers
Keep the ANY caps empty internally when appending and merging
caps/structures. Previously, an ANY caps could end up containing
internal structures, which could be fetched by the user, and gave the
caps a non-zero length.
Also, made sure that `gst_caps_set_features_simple` frees the features
if caps is empty.
Fixed gst_caps_is_strictly_equal() to take into account whether either of
the caps are ANY caps. Previously, two ANY caps could be considered not
strictly equal if one of them still contained some remnant *internal*
structure (this can happen if an ANY caps has emerged from an append or
merge operation). Also, an ANY caps with no remnant internal structures
was considered strictly equal to an EMPTY caps. Similarly, a non-ANY caps
was considered strictly equal to an ANY caps if its remnant internal
structures happened to match.
Also changed gst_caps_is_fixed to take into account that an ANY caps
should not be considered fixed even if it contains a single remnant
internal fixed structure. This affects gst_caps_is_equal(), which uses a
separate method if both caps are fixed. Previously, this meant that a
non-ANY fixed caps was considered equal to an ANY caps if it contained a
single matching remnant internal structure.
Added some tests for these two equality methods, which covers the above
examples, as well as asserts existing behaviour.
Fixes#496
If you're using a custom log handler, you had to reverse-engineer the
debug log format and create your own format function. Now, you can
call `gst_debug_log_get_line()` and it will return a string (without
ANSI escape color codes) representation instead.
This is useful in situations when you need to log the ordinary
gst_debug log to a resource that can't be opened as a `FILE` handle.
Also includes a test.
We now have GstTestClock-based tests that validate the same logic,
without inducing spurious timing failures / overly relying on sleeps.
Fixes: #346Fixes: #347Fixes: #348
Co-authored by: Thibault Saunier <tsaunier@igalia.com>
There was a case where we started waiting on the clock before setting
the clock time, leading to the wait succeeding instead of being late:
gsttestclock.c:1073:F:testclock:test_late_crank:0: '1 * GST_SECOND' (1000000000) is not equal to 'context.jitter' (-4000000000)
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/issues/426
Co-authored by: Mathieu Duponchelle <mathieu@centricular.com>
A common use case of a dynamically built pipeline is that you want to
(conditionally) find a certain element, e.g. the `rtpbin`s in a
`uridecodebin`. If that element has a fixed name inside its parent bin
(and only has a single instance) this can be easily done by
`gst_bin_get_by_name()`.
If there are multiple instances of the element however, you can only use
`gst_bin_iterate_all_by_interface()`, but this doesn't work if you don't
have the specific `GType` (which is often the case, due to plugins being
dynamically loaded). As such, another fallback could be to use the
well-known name of the element's factory (in case of our example, this
is of course `"rtpbin"`).
Fixes#345
There were two causes for the flakiness, one much rarer than
the other.
The test sets up a source with a sometimes pad added during
the transition of a wrapper bin from READY to PAUSED.
It runs 4 iterations, the last of which makes it so the
negotiation fails.
In that case, the intention as correctly presented by the following
comment:
/* [..] ie, the pipeline should create ok but fail to change state */
However the implementation of run_delayed_test was neither calling
get_state on the pipeline (it called it on the wrapper bin), nor
checking that the return of get_state was FAILURE (it actually
checked that it was not).
This led to an obvious race condition, and was fixed by calling
get_state on the pipeline, then checking that in this specific
case (expect_link == FALSE), the state change has actually failed.
The second, rarer race condition is at set_state time. When we
don't expect the link to succeed, the return of set_state may
either be FAILURE or ASYNC, depending on timing. This was fixed
by taking expect_link into account when checking the return value
of set_state.
Co-authored by: Thibault Saunier <tsaunier@igalia.com>
And change it to do nothing at all.
As debug categories don't use reference counting and they can be
retrieved from anywhere at any time by name, it is fundamentally unsafe
to free them at any point in time except for right before the end of the
process.
No code apart from a unit test seems to be currently using the function,
so deprecate it and also change it to do nothing at all.
Needs a valgrind suppression for:
==11119== Warning: invalid file descriptor -1 in syscall close()
==11119== Warning: invalid file descriptor -1 in syscall close()
==11119== Syscall param write(buf) points to uninitialised byte(s)
==11119== at 0x4C4AFAD: syscall (in /usr/lib64/libc-2.29.so)
==11119== by 0x4E70DF9: write_validate (Ginit.c:112)
==11119== by 0x4E70DF9: UnknownInlinedFun (Ginit.c:148)
==11119== by 0x4E70DF9: mincore_validate (Ginit.c:131)
==11119== by 0x4E70CC3: UnknownInlinedFun (Ginit.c:208)
==11119== by 0x4E70CC3: access_mem (Ginit.c:242)
==11119== by 0x4E75536: UnknownInlinedFun (libunwind_i.h:168)
==11119== by 0x4E75536: apply_reg_state (Gparser.c:863)
==11119== by 0x4E75A71: _ULx86_64_dwarf_step (Gparser.c:952)
==11119== by 0x4E71BD3: _ULx86_64_step (Gstep.c:71)
==11119== by 0x48BAF47: generate_unwind_trace (gstinfo.c:2726)
==11119== by 0x48BC92E: gst_debug_get_stack_trace (gstinfo.c:2908)
==11119== by 0x49B2BB2: handle_object_created.part.0 (gstleaks.c:384)
==11119== by 0x488134E: gst_object_constructed (gstobject.c:141)
==11119== by 0x49EC61B: g_object_new_internal (gobject.c:1845)
==11119== by 0x49EE347: g_object_new_valist (gobject.c:2128)
==11119== by 0x49EE69C: g_object_new (gobject.c:1648)
==11119== by 0x48CA59D: gst_pad_new_from_template (gstpad.c:867)
==11119== by 0x68C209E: gst_base_src_init (gstbasesrc.c:454)
==11119== by 0x4A0A0C3: g_type_create_instance (gtype.c:1858)
==11119== by 0x49EC42C: g_object_new_internal (gobject.c:1805)
==11119== by 0x49EDB14: g_object_new_with_properties (gobject.c:1973)
==11119== by 0x49EE6C0: g_object_new (gobject.c:1645)
==11119== by 0x48AF91A: gst_element_factory_create (gstelementfactory.c:372)
==11119== Address 0x1ffeffe000 is on thread 1's stack
==11119== in frame #6, created by generate_unwind_trace (gstinfo.c:2695)
Fixed in libunwind commit:
b256722d49
Needs a separate suppression for Debian because the callstack is
different there.
The offset in gst_buffer_resize() is additive. So to move back the
offset to zero, we need to pass the opposite of the current offset. This
was raised through the related unit test failingon 32bit as on 64bit
the alignment padding was enough to hide the issue. The test was
modified to also fail on 64bit. This patch will remove spurious
assertions like:
assertion 'bufmax >= bufoffs + offset + size' failed
Fixes#316
At the moment, we can only use crank if the pending entry is in the
future. This patch leaves the clock time to the same point if the
pending entry was in the past. This still execute a single entry. This
will be needed for the jitterbuffer, since as soon as we stop waking up
the jitterbuffer when the timer is reschedule later, we may endup with
such case in the unit tests.
Related to #608
Instead of tracking "pending_flush_*" on the pads and the
aggregator, we now simply track the last seqnum for flush start
and flush stop events on the pads, and use it to determine whether
we should enter or exit our flushing state.
See https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/issues/977
This means we can use some newer features and get rid of some
boilerplate code using the `G_DECLARE_*` macros.
As discussed on IRC, 2.44 is old enough by now to start depending on it.
Before GST_PAD_PROBE_HANDLED was introduced, we had to handle the case
where some probes would reset the probe info data field to NULL. This would
be considered an invalid use-case.
But with GST_PAD_PROBE_HANDLED it is totally fine to reset that, since
the probe has "handled" it.
When performing a key unit trickmode seek, it may be useful to
specify a minimum interval between the output frames, either
in very high rate cases, or as a protection against streams
that may contain an overly large amount of key frames.
One use case is ONVIF Section 6.5.3:
<https://www.onvif.org/specs/stream/ONVIF-Streaming-Spec.pdf>
Other gstreamer repositories have their own valgrind suppression file
directly in the repository.
Add a suppression file to the core gstreamer repository too, this makes
it easier to use it with gst-build which does not check out the common
module.
This is also a little step towards the removal of the common submodule.
NOTE: the added file is the latest version from the "common" repository
but it has been renamed from gst.supp to gstreamer.supp for symmetry
with the suppression files in the other repositories.
Since elements_fdsrc.test_num_buffers uses blocking pipe on Windows,
the test will never be finished. But emulating non-blocking fd without
win32 APIs on Windows is a little tricky.
For metas where order might be significant if multiple metas are
attached to the same buffer, so store a sequence number with the
meta when adding it to the buffer. This allows users of the meta
to make sure metas are processed in the right order.
We need a 64-bit integer for the sequence number here in the API,
a 32-bit one might overflow too easily with high packet/buffer
rates. We could do it rtp-seqnum style of course, but that's a
bit of a pain.
We could also make it so that gst_buffer_add_meta() just keeps metas in
order or rely on the order we add the metas in, but that seems too
fragile overall, when buffers (incl. metas) get merged or split.
Also add a compare function for easier sorting.
We store the seqnum in the MetaItem struct here and not in the
GstMeta struct since there's no padding in the GstMeta struct.
We could add a private struct to GstMeta before the start of
GstMeta, but that's what MetaItem effectively is implementation-
wise. We can still change this later if we want, since it's all
private.
Fixes#262
gstharness.c: Use G_GSIZE_FORMAT instead of hard-coding %zu
error: unknown conversion type character 'z' in format [-Werror=format]
gst-inspect.c: GPid is void* on non-UNIX, and we only use it on UNIX
error: initialization makes pointer from integer without a cast [-Werror]
gstmeta.c: Use and then discard value
error: value computed is not used [-Werror=unused-value]
With this, gstreamer builds with -Werror on MinGW
While extremelly rare, time and gst_date_time_new_* will have
diff values and potentially trigger an assertion. Thus move
the calls as closely together as possible to mitigate this.
We have to ensure that all background threads from thread pools are shut
down, or otherwise they might not have had a chance yet to drop their
last reference to the pipeline and then the assertion for a reference
count of 1 on the pipeline fails.
Otherwise it can easily happen that the pad is destroyed before the
thread disappears, as happened sometimes in the test_pad_probe_block_add_remove
test where joining of the thread was done *after* the pad was unreffed
and destroyed.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/issues/339
Existing test for iterating/removing buffer meta data was insufficient
to detect linked list corruption when removing multiple items, and could
also suffer from such corruption in attempting to count remaining items.
Modified the one test and added several others to exercise multiple
scenarios.
Validates fix for issue #332.