streams with non-TIME segments will not have timestamps ...
... and therefore will never unblock the other streams.
Fixes blocking issue when using playbin suburi feature
People expect audiorate to fix things up and not make things worse
by default, so let's default to a similar tolerance as audiosinks
do. Should help with transcoding and the like, though one might
possible still want higher values then.
We can't just make a vfunc that takes a union of int
and pointer as argument, and then set up subclass-specific
action signals and signals that take int (in multifdsink's
case) or a GSocket * (in multisocketsink's case), and then
expect everything to Just Work. This blows up spectacularly
on PPC G4 for some reason.
Fixes multifdsink unit test on PPC, and fixes aborts in
multisocketunit test (now hangs in gst_pad_push - progress).
* Update outgoing segment.base with accumulated time, ensuring all
streams are synchronized.
* Only consider streams as "new" is they have a STREAM_START event
with a different seqnum.
* Use GstStream segment.base instead of separate variable to store
the past running time.
* Disable passthrough
* Switch to glib 2.32 GMutex/GCond
* Avoid getting pad parent the expensive way
* Minor other fixes
Make sure to send a CAPS event downstream when we get our
first input caps. This fixes not-negotiated errors and
adder use with downstream elements other than fakesink.
Even gst-launch-1.0 audiotestsrc ! adder ! pulsesink works now.
Also, flag the other sink pads as FIXED_CAPS when we receive
the first CAPS event on one of the sink pads (in addition to
setting those caps on the the sink pads), so that a caps query
will just return the fixed caps from now on.
There's still a race between other upstreams checking if
caps are accepted and sending a first buffer with possibly
different caps than the first caps we receive on some other
pad, but such is life.
Also need to take into account optional fields better/properly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=679545
Fix invalid memory access caused by broken pointer arithmetic.
If we have a uint16_t *tmpbuf and add n * dest->stride to it, we
skip twice as much as we intended to because dest->stride is in
bytes and not in pixels. This made us write beyond the end of
our allocated temp buffer, and made the unit test crash.
Make function pointers NULL when nothing needs to be done.
Pass target pixels to dither and matrix functions so that we can later make
them operate on the target buffer memory directly.
This allows the following use-cases to expose the group and pads
before an ALLOCATION query comes through:
* Single stream use-cases
* Multi stream use-cases where all streams sent the CAPS event before
the first ALLOCATION query
Some cases will still make the initial ALLOCATION query fail though,
which isn't optimal, but not fatal (it will recover when pads are
exposed, a RECONFIGURE event is sent upstream and elements can
re-send an ALLOCATION query which will reach downstream elements).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680262
A caps event is also used to establish that a stream has prerolled.
Without this, we end up allowing negotiation queries to fail, ending
in decoders (and other elements) to not be configured right from the
start with the most optimal settings.