When using an HLS encrypted stream, an assertion failure is thrown:
(gst-launch-1.0:31028): GLib-GObject-WARNING **: cannot register
existing type `GstFragment'
(gst-launch-1.0:31028): GLib-CRITICAL **: g_once_init_leave: assertion
`result != 0' failed
Eventually tracked this down to the call gst_fragment_new()
in function gst_hls_demux_decrypt_fragment.
The GstFragment class is defined in ext/hls/gstfragment.c and in
gst-libs/gst/uridownloader/gstfragment.c. Having two class definitions
with the same name causes the assert failure when trying to allocate
GstFragment. Deleting the version from hls and editing the
Makefile.am solves this assert failure.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704555
The program_number attribute was overloaded, trying to indicate both
the currently playing program, and the program requested via the
"program-number" property. The end result was that setting the
property didn't work (see #690934).
I added a new requested_program_number field rather than reviving the
current_program_number field because it seemed this would result in
fewer changes overall and be less confusing. It breaks symmetry with
the "program-number" property, but it retains parallels with the likes
of program->program_number.
Because gst_ts_demux_reset is called after the properties have been
parsed, requested_program_number is initialised in gst_ts_demux_init.
Whether this is exactly the right place, I don't know.
Setting the program-number property does not affect which program
is actually being demuxed.
Moving the initialization of the program_number from
gst_ts_demux_reset to gst_ts_demux_init seems to fix this issue.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690934
* Avoids handling twice the same seek (can happen with playbin and files
with subtitles)
* Set the sequence number of the segment event to the sequence number of
the seek event that generated it (-1 for the initial one).
The seeking start time is approximated from the seek offset in bytes
using the accumulated PCR observations, so on a VBR stream there might
be a big difference between the actual PCR and the estimated one after
the seek. This might result in a long wait to skip all out of segments
packets.
Instead we just recalculate the new segment to start at the first PTS
after the seek, so that playback starts immediatly.
The caps should always represent what the user is supposed to see.
So if there is a sequence_display_extension associated with the
stream then use the display_horizontal_size/display_vertical_size
to update the src caps (if they are less than the values provided
by sequence header).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704009
This is actually a workaround (we'll be skipping the upcoming section)
This will only happen for sections where the beginning is located within
the last 8 bytes of a packet (which is the minimum we need to properly
identify any section beginning).
Later we should figure out a way to store those bytes and mark that
some analysis needs to happen. The probability of this happening is
too low for me to care right now and do that fix. There is a good chance
that section will eventually be repeated and won't end up on such border.
* Avoid repeating code everywhere, and instead provide all parsing
information in one go.
* Add BAT support
* Refine BAT/CAT identification (by adding PID checks)
* packet.origts is no longer used since the PCR refactoring done ages ago
* known_packet_size is a duplicate of packet_size != 0
* caps was never used outside of the packetizer
Restore the original h264parser behaviour to report cropped dimensions
in size caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694068
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
Fix calculation of the frame cropping rectangle, and more precisely
the actual cropped height. The frame_crop_top_offset subtraction
was not scaled up with SubHeightC.
Also clean-up variables to align more with (7-18) to (7-21).
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
Assign the un-cropped width/height to sps->width/sps->height
during sps header parsing. Added new fields to SPS header structure
to provide the crop-rectangle dimensions.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694068
During a live stream it is possible for dashdemux to lag behind on a
slow connection or to rush ahead of the connection os too fast.
For the first case it is necessary to jump some segments ahead to be able to
continue playback as old segments are usually deleted from the server.
For the later, dashdemux should wait a little before attempting another
download do give time to the server to produce a new segment
When using a template based segment list, do not try to
contruct a finite segment list for the limits of the available periods.
We might not know when the period ends (for live streams) and we can
always create the segment on demand when requested by dashdemux,
avoiding use of some memory and cpu when re-creating this list.
Replaces the 2 likely larger lists with more appropriate structures
to improve performance.
Replaces S nodes GList for a GQueue, this reduces latency to startup
because of traversing the list just append an element.
Replaces the processed media segments GList for a GPtrArray as it is
constantly acessed by index during playback.
Cancelled is a 'permanent' state of the uridownloader and is only
removed by a call to _reset. When a download fails we just want to
return NULL on the fetch function and leave the downloader ready
for another fetch, otherwise the user has to call _reset after
failed downloader, even when it didn't call _cancel.
Due to the variety of section types out there, we need to add
some checks when identifying section types.
We check here that the PID is also consistent with the table_id.
We had two issues with the previous code:
1) We were badly handling PUSI-flagged packets. We were discarding the
initial data (if pointer != 0) whereas we should have been accumulating
it with the previous data (if there was a continuity of course).
=> First series of information loss
2) We were not checking whether there were more sections after the end
of one (i.e. when the following byte was not a stuff byte).
This fixes those two issues.
Fixes#677443https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677443
Until now we simply ignored those streams (since we couldn't do anything
with it anyway). Now that we have the mpegts library and we offload the
section handling to the application side we can properly identify and
extract them.
By default it is disabled for tsparse and enabled for tsdemux, but there is
a property to change that.
This should open the way to properly handle all private section streams,
including:
* DSM-CC
* MHEG
* Carousel data
* Metadata streams (though I haven't seen any of those in the wild)
* ... And all other specs/protocols making use of those
Partially fixes#560631
The size checks were wrong. The smallest size for a NIT is 16 bytes
(12 for the smallest content + 4 for crc) and the smallest size for
a inner stream loop is 6 bytes (without any descriptors).
Also remove FIXME that has already moved elsewhere