5697b6b89b causes us to possibly listen
on a toolkit provided Display connection. We thus could eat their
precious winsys events. Only listen if we need to
(!foreign_display or videooverlay).
Add a vfunc that is called by glfilter before it sets
caps features and intersects with the peer caps, and
move removing the size from caps into its default
implementation. Allows sub-classes to do more
sophisticated management of the size fields in case they
don't support arbitrary resizing or have distinct
preferences.
Previously when compiling GstGL with both GL and GLES2,
GL_RGBA8 was picked from GL/gl.h. But a clash may happen at
runtime when one is selecting GLES2.
gst_gl_internal_format_rgba allows to check at runtime
if it should use GL_RGBA or GL_RGBA8.
Simple implementation split from GstGLWindowWayland
Can now have multiple glimagesink elements all displaying output
linked via GL or otherwise (barring GL platform limitations).
The intel driver is racy and can crash setting up the two glimagesink contexts.
e.g.
videotestsrc ! tee name=t ! queue ! glupload ! glimagesinkelement
t. ! queue ! gleffects_blur ! glimagesinkelement
videotestsrc ! glupload ! glfiltercube ! tee name=t ! queue ! glimagesinkelement
t. ! queue ! gleffects_blur ! glimagesinkelement
Otherwise we could end up being mistaken for the diference between a
gl3 and a gl2 context resulting in a failure getting the list of
extensions from the wrapped context due to the difference between
glGetString and glGetStringi for the GL_EXTENSIONS token.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749728
When called from gst_gl_window_win32_close(), internal window
could not exist, and if it does it's going to be destroyed just
after that anyway. Also it causes window_proc() to be called
and crash because it gets a NULL context.
When called from gst_gl_window_win32_set_window_handle() we are
going to set another parent anyway, and it's probably better to
reparent directly instead of passing by a NULL parent which could
cause the internal window to popup briefly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749601
gst_gl_context_finalize() is calling gst_gl_window_win32_quit()
which was posting a message. But then window_proc takes window's
context and get a NULL.
Now that we've got a GMainLoop we can do like other backends and
simply call g_main_loop_quit().
This also remove duplicated code to release the parent window and
potential crash there because parent_proc could be NULL if we never
created the internal window. That could happen for example if setting
state to READY then setting a window_handle, and go back to NULL state.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749601
gst_gl_window_win32_send_message_async() could be called before the
internal window is created so we cannot use PostMessage there.
x11 and wayland backends both create a custom GSource for this,
so there is no reason to not do that for win32.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749601
Otherwise it could stay client side without being submitted to the GL
server resulting in another context waiting on a Fence that will never
become signalled causing a deadlock.
Make the passthrough check contingent on only the fields we
can modify being unchanged, and pre-compute it when caps
change instead of checking on each buffer. Makes the passthrough
more lenient if consumers are lax about making input and output
caps complete.
Show the DispmanX window only if there's no shared external GL context
set up. When a window is required by the context a transparent
DispmanX element is created and later on made visible by the ::show
method.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746632
In some upload implementations the out buffer has more than one references,
turning the buffer not writable, so it won't be possible to modify its
meta-data.
This patch moves the meta-data copy before increasing the reference of the out
buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=746173
Chaining a downstream pool would lead to two owner of the same
pool. In dynamic pipeline, if one owner is removed from the pipeline
the pool will be stopped, and the rest of the pipeline will fail
since the pool will now be flushing. Also fix proposed pool caching,
filter->pool was never set, never unrefed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745705
Otherwise the pipeline stalls when running
more than one glimagesink with gst-launch.
Also only register the custom nsapp loop
when setting up the nsapp from gstgl.
We also need to recalculate the offset, since otherwise the frame
mapping will be forward two lines in the U and V planes (I420) due
to gst_video_info_align() round up the Y plane to a even number of
lines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745054
Make sure we support offset and video alignment when downloading too.
This is currently not used (plane_start is always 0), but it makes
the code correct if we want to use that later.
Provide the right size to GL when uploading. Using maxsize is wrong
since we offset the data point with the memory offset and video
alignement offset.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
When the memory is partial copy, the texture size and videoinfo no
longer make sense. As we cannot guess what the application wants, we
safely copy into a sysmem memory.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
This implements support for GstAllocationParams and memory alignments.
The parameters where simply ignored which could lead to crash on
certain platform when used with libav and no luck.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744246
When trying to render buffers with meta:GLTextureUpload the glimagesink crashes
with a segmentation fault.
This patch workarounds this crash setting to NULL the method implementation
after free.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745206
When setting a new window handle, we need to ensure all implementations
will detect the change.
For that we deactivate the context before setting the window handle, then
reactivate the context
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745090
When (re)activating the context, the backing window handle might have changed.
If that happened, destroy the previous surface and create a new one
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745090
This fix a very slow rendering rate regression that only
happens when using gst-launch, i.e. in the case where
the main thread does not run any NSApp loop.
Git bisect reported it has been introduced by the commit
e10d2417e2:
"move to CGL and CAOpenGLLayer for rendering".
Then the commit 7d46357627:
"gstglwindow_cocoa: fix slow render rate" attempted to fix
the slow rendering rate problem when using gst-launch.
At least for me it does not work. I tried several
combinations, for example to flush CA transactions in the
custom app loop, as mentioned in the doc, but the only solution
that fixes the slow rendering is by reducing the loop latency.
From what I tested, no need to put less than 60ms, even if the
framerate has an interval much lower (16.6ms for 60 fps).
Anytime else, we have no idea how to match up map and unmaps.
We also don't know exactly how the calling code is using us.
Also fixes the case where we're trying to transfer while someone else
is accessing our data pointer or texture resulting in mismatched video
frames.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744839
Where possible, use the _OBJECT variants in order to track better from
which object the debug statement is coming from
Define (and use) GST_CAT_DEFAULT where applicable
Use GST_PTR_FORMAT where applicable
In gst_gl_filter_fixate_caps () it can goto done without freeing the memory of
the tmp GstStructure. This makes it go out of scope and leak.
CID #1265765
Allows finer grain decisions about formats and features at each
stage of the pipeline.
Also provide propose_allocation for glupload besed on the supported
methods.
In gst_gl_window_cocoa_draw we used to just call setNeedsDisplay:YES. That was
creating an implicit CA transaction which was getting committed at the next
runloop iteration. Since we don't know how often the main runloop is running,
and when we run it implicitly (from gst_gl_window_cocoa_nsapp_iteration) we only
do so every 200ms, use an explicit CA transaction instead and commit it
immediately. CA transactions nest and debounce automatically so this will never
result in extra work.
Make GstGLMemory hold the texture target (tex_target) the texture it represents
(tex_id) is bound to. Modify gst_gl_memory_wrapped_texture and
gst_gl_download_perform_with_data to take the texture target as an argument.
This change is needed to support wrapping textures created outside libgstgl,
which might be bound to a target other than GL_TEXTURE_2D. For example on OSX
textures coming from VideoToolbox have target GL_TEXTURE_RECTANGLE.
With this change we still keep (and sometimes imply) GL_TEXTURE_2D as the
target of textures created with libgstgl.
API: modify GstGLMemory
API: modify gst_gl_memory_wrapped_texture
API: gst_gl_download_perform_with_data
Don't call glClear && glClearColor at each draw since we're going to draw the
whole viewport anyway. Gets rid of a glFlush triggered by glClear on OSX.
In order to use pbo's efficiently, the transfer operation has to
be separated from the use of the downloaded data which requires some
rearchitecturing around glcolorconvert/gldownload and elements
Depending on the platform, it was only ever implemented to 1) set a
default surface size, 2) resize based on the video frame or 3) nothing.
Instead, provide a set_preferred_size () that elements/applications
can use to request a certain size which may be ignored for
videooverlay/other cases.
Removes the use of NSOpenGL* variety and functions. Any Cocoa
specific functions that took/returned a NSOpenGL* object now
take/return the CGL equivalents.
The hack causes deadlocks and other interesting problems and it really
can only be fixed properly inside GLib. We will include a patch for
GLib in our builds for now that handles this, and hopefully at some
point GLib will also merge a proper solution.
A proper solution would first require to refactor the polling in
GMainContext to only provide a single fd, e.g. via epoll/kqueue
or a thread like the one added by our patch. Then this single
fd could be retrieved from the GMainContext and directly integrated
into a NSRunLoop.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741450https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704374
Soon after setting two variables to 1, the code checks if their values are
different from each other. This would never be true. Removing this.
CID 1226443
Actually we should always recalculate buffer size since our buffer size
even when not-padded is smaller for many sub-sampled formats. This is
because we don't add padding between the planes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740900
Problem was that if buffer was mapped READWRITE (state of buffers from
libav right now), mapping it READ/GL will not upload. This is because the
flag is only set when the buffer is unmapped. We can fix this by setting
the flags in map. This result in already mapped buffer that get mapped
to be read in GL will be uploaded. The problem is that if the write
mapper makes modification afterward, the modification will never get
uploaded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740900
A context can create a GLsync object that can be waited on in order
to ensure that GL resources created in one context are able to be
used in another shared context without any chance of reading invalid
data.
This meta would be placed on buffers that are known to cross from
one context to another. The receiving element would then wait
on the sync object to ensure that the data to be used is complete.
Floating point numbers are written differently in different
locales, e.g. in many countries 1/2 = 0,5 instead of 0.5, and
strtod will not be able to parse "0.5" correctly in such a
locale.
Otherwise interesting things will happen in Cocoa applications, like
infinite event loops that block the NSApplication loop forever.
This was only needed for GNUStep and thus can safely be removed now.
Until gcc and GNUStep properly support Objective-C blocks and other
"new" features of Objective-C we can't properly support them without
making the code much more ugly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739152
It's architecture dependent and should not be placed into the include
directory as the assumption is that all those headers are architecture
independent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739767
Otherwise when resizing the window you will also get messages like:
class NSConcreteMapTable autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class NSConcreteValue autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class NSConcreteValue autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class __NSCFDictionary autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
Need to set the ':' as the reshape method now takes one parameter.
For the story, the GstGLNSView was previously inheriting from
NSOpenGLView which has a reshape function without any parameter.
Now the GstGLNSView inherits from NSView and we re-use the reshape
function manually.
Use the reshape function after being defined. The other way
would have been to declare the reshape function in the header.
gstglwindow_cocoa.m: In function '-[GstGLNSView drawRect:]':
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: 'GstGLNSView' may not respond to '-reshape'
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: (Messages without a matching method signature
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: will be assumed to return 'id' and accept
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: '...' as arguments.)
GTK-Doc uses a special syntax for code documentation. A multiline comment that
starts with an additional '*' marks a documentation block that will be processed
by the GTK-Doc tools. So GTK-Doc is confused if a comment block starts with that
additional '*' but isn't meant to be processed. Removing this additional '*'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739444
gstglwindow_cocoa.m: In function '-[GstGLNSView drawRect:]':
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: 'GstGLNSView' may not respond to '-reshape'
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: (Messages without a matching method signature
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: will be assumed to return 'id' and accept
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: '...' as arguments.)
Using NSApp directly seems to confuse something, as the compiler
was expecting an id<NSFileManagerDelegate>. Switched to using
[NSApplication sharedApplication], and specified the delegate
protocol on the window class as well.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738740
- The shader was outputing the wrong values compared with raw
videotestsrc.
- deal with the texture edge properly.
- properly sample the 2x1 rectangle for the u and v values
- don't double sample the y value
The visible rect and bounds might be the same as before, but Cocoa
might've changed our viewport without us nothing. This happens if
you hide the view and show it again.
This is only for non-Cocoa apps but previously caused a 2 second
waiting during startup for Cocoa apps. This is unacceptable.
Instead we now check a bit more extensive if something actually
runs on the GLib default main context, and if not don't even
bother waiting for something to happen from there.
Otherwise we could pass on a RGBA formatted buffer and downstream would
misinterpret that as some other video format.
Fixes pipelines of the form
gleffects ! tee ! xvimagesink
Allows callers to properly reference count the buffers used for
rendering.
Fixes a redraw race in glimagesink where the previous buffer
(the one used for redraw operations) is freed as soon as the next
buffer is uploaded.
1. glimagesink uploads in _prepare() to texture n
1.1 glupload holds buffer n
2. glimagesink _render()s texture n
3. glimagesink uploads texture n+1
3.1 glupload free previous buffer which deletes texture n
3.2 glupload holds buffer n+1
4. glwindow resize/expose
5. glimagesink redraws with texture n
The race is that the buffer n (the one used for redrawing) is freed as soon as
the buffer n+1 arrives. There could be any amount of time and number of
redraws between this event and when buffer n+1 is actually rendered and thus
replaces buffer n as the redraw source.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736740
This thread dispatches navigation events. It is needed to avoid deadlocks
between window backend threads that emit navigation events (e.g. X11/GMainLoop
thread) and consumers of navigation events such as glimagesink, see
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733661
GstGlWindow_x11 thread is changed to invoke the navigation thread for navigation
dispatching, instead of emiting the event itself. Othe backends beside X11 do
not dispatch navigation events yet, but should use this thread when dispatching
these events in the future.
The navigation thread is currently part of GstGLWindow and not implemented in
separate subclasses / backends. This will be needed in the future.
gst_gl_window_x11_get_surface_dimensions is also changed to use a cached value
of the window's width, height. These values are now retrieved in the X11
thread, function gst_gl_window_x11_handle_event. This change is needed because
otherwise the XGetWindowAttributes gets called from the navigation thread,
leading to xlib aborting due to multithreaded access (if XInitThreads is not
called before, as is the case for gst-launch)
EGL_CONTEXT_FLAGS_KHR and EGL_CONTEXT_OPENGL_DEBUG_BIT_KHR
don't exist in the Android NDK. Wrap their usage in an #ifdef
EGL_KHR_create_context to fix the build there.
The text for EGL_KHR_create_context added the possiblity for ES
contexts to ask for a debug context however that has not been
fully realized by all implementations. Fallback to a non-debug
context when the implementation errors.
If window is resized, GstStructure pointer values have to be rescaled to
original geometry. A get_surface_dimensions GLWindow class method is added for
this purpose and used in the navigation send_event function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703486
Certain elements expect that there be a certain number of lines
that they can write into. e.g. for odd heights, I420, YV12, NV12,
NV21 (and others) Y lines are expected to have exactly twice the
number of U/UV lines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733717
We cannot do it as the winsys may crash if we initialize too late.
Example, GLX contexts with Intel drivers:
Intel requires the X Display to be the same in order to share GL
resources across GL contexts. These GL contexts are generally
accessed from different threads. Without winsys support it is
nearly impossible to guarentee that concurrent access will not
occur. This concurrent access could result in crashes or abortion
by the winsys (xcb).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731525
The reshape property was never used.
Replace the draw property with a signal.
Based on patch by Mathieu Duponchelle <mathieu.duponchelle@epitech.eu>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704507
Fixes a segfault with decodebin ! glmixer where the request pads on
both sides were being requested after the state change to PAUSED.
Also fixes dynamically adding and removing pads while glmixer is
in a state >= PAUSED.
Currently, GstGLWindowWaylandEGL holds the wayland display connection
If we create the EGLDisplay at the GstDisplay creation time, then
libEGL will internally open another connection to the wayland server.
These two display connections are unable to communicate resulting in
no window output/display and hangs inside libEGL.
Eventually we will move the wl_display from GstGLWindow to GstGLDisplay.
Fixes the case where _perform_with_buffer() is called without
intervening calls to _release_buffer() as is the case on start up
with glimagesink.
Also release the buffer when reseting the upload.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731107
Fixes issues with .so (without numbering) being installed for development
(such as from mesa-dev) but actual driver (with numbering) coming from
some other place (like nvidia drivers)
Before:
GST_GL_PLATFORM=cocoa GST_GL_WINDOW=cocoa
gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! glimagesink
After:
GST_GL_PLATFORM=cgl GST_GL_WINDOW=cocoa
gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! glimagesink
but still pass --enable-cocoa to configure script
because currently it can only be used with cocoa API.
We could later have cgl/gstglcontext_cgl.h that manages
a CGLContextObj directly and cocoa/gstglcontext_cocoa.h
would just wrap it.
So that it could be used with other Apple's window APIs.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=729245