The previous code was setting keytarget to target
to make sure the keyframe found for each pad was
indeed before the target.
Then if target == keytarget, it assumed a keyframe had been
found, which was not the case if target was before the first frame
in the file.
This patch checks that a keyframe was indeed found, and if not
seeks to 0, without bisecting again.
Assuming default gst qa assets in $HOME/gst-validate
seek_before_first_frame.scenario:
description, seek=true, handles-states=true
pause, playback-time=0.0
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.0, flags=accurate+flush
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.01, flags=accurate+flush
seek, playback-time=0.0, start=0.1, flags=accurate+flush
GST_DEBUG=*theoradec*:2 gst-validate-1.0 playbin \
uri=file://$HOME/gst-validate/gst-qa-assets/medias/ogg/vorbis_theora.0.ogg \
--set-scenario seek_before_first_frame.scenario
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741097
When encoding, libvorbis will tell us how many samples are encoded
in the buffer it returns. This number may be less than the maximum
of samples in the block, if this is the last packet. In we have no
segment end time, we set it to the end time of that last sample to
tell downstream that the buffer contains less samples.
Samples may be clipped at the end, and this is conveyed by a
granulepos that's smaller than it would otherwise be. Use the
segment stop time to detect this, and calculate the right
granulepos.
When the textoverlay is set outside the video frame by deltax or deltay the
calculation segfaults, but it is also unnecessary since it doesn't need to be
displayed. So we should clip the text.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738242
vorbis_reorder_map is defined for eight channels max. If we have more
than eight channels, it's the application which shall define the order.
Since we set audio position to none, we just interleave all the channels
without any particular reordering.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737742
The allocation query failure doesn't mean that the negotiation
has failed as the element can allocate buffers itself.
Instead, only fail if the pads are flushing and the allocation
query failed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735844
The source pad might be flushing while negotiating, resulting in
set_caps or the ALLOCATION query failing. In this case set the
reconfigure flag on the source pad so that negotiation is retried on the
next buffer.
When downstream claims to accept the overlay meta but fails to
provide it in the allocation query, properly fallback to setting
a new caps without the overlay meta as that is not going to be used.
Only do this if the original caps doesn't have the overlay already,
otherwise there isn't much that can be done.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735800
Setting segment.base in the segment sent from gst_ogg_demux_handle_page() is
enough to ensure that chained oggs are played corretly (see bgo#706569).
Tweaking the base in gst_ogg_pad_submit_packet() as well result in delays when
playing a file with start != -1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735808
It's not done in any other code calling negotiate and will cause deadlocks
as it is sending events and queries in the pipeline.
Specifically this pipeline was deadlocking:
gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc ! textoverlay ! textoverlay ! fakesink
Base time should be accumulated so non flushing seeks have the expected base.
Not accumulating result in segments appearing as "too late" and so are not
played by the sink.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735509
Make textoverlay negotiate caps more correctly.
1) Check what caps we received in the video-sink
2) If it already has the overlay meta -> use it directly
3) If it doesn't, textoverlay try adding the overlay meta and using it,
if downstream doesn't support it, just use what is received in the
video-sink
4) Check if the allocation query also supports the meta to enable
really using it
Before it wasn't really doing renegotiation of any kind, just
re-checking if it should use the overlay meta or not
Also had to update the caps in the test as memory:SystemMemory seems
to be required when you use a caps feature otherwise intersection/subset
checks will fail.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733916
When a pipeline using alsasink and push mode upstream fails
to preroll, the following state will be the case:
- A loop upstream will be PAUSED, pushing a first buffer
- alsasink will be READY, pending PAUSED, because async
On error, the pipeline will switch to NULL. alsasink is in
READY, so goes to NULL immediately. It zeroes its cached
caps. Meanwhile, the upstream loop can cause a caps query,
conccurent with the state change. This will use those cached
caps. If the zeroing happens between the NULL test and the
dereferencing, GStreamer will critical down in the GstValue
code.
Since it appears that such a gap between states (PAUSED
and pushing upstream, and NULL downstream) is expected, we
need to protect the read/write access to the cached caps.
This fixes the critical.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=731121
This lets oggdemux determine they are not delta units, and removes
spurious per packet warnings about being unable to determine the
packet's keyframeness.
They are very confusing for people, and more often than not
also just not very accurate. Seeing 'last reviewed: 2005' in
your docs is not very confidence-inspiring. Let's just remove
those comments.