It causes the timestamp to go wrong, should not cause much of a performance
increase and in the cases where it is faster, it is broken in 0.10 as well.
We should try to review this when rewriting the adapter for 0.11 memory
features.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=674791
gst_buffer_take_memory -> gst_buffer_insert_memory because insert is what the
method does.
Make all methods deal with ranges so that we can replace, merge, remove and map
a certain subset of the memory in a buffer. With the new methods we can make
some code nicer and reuse more code. Being able to deal with a subset of the
buffer memory allows us to optimize more cases later (most notably RTP headers
and payload that could be in different memory objects).
Make some more convenient macros that call the more generic range methods.
Add gst_buffer_append() which appends the memory blocks from one buffer to
another. Remove the old inefficient _merge() and _join() methods which forced a
premature memcpy in most cases.
Remove the _is_span() and _span() methods they are not needed anymore now that
we can _append(). Merging and spanning will be delayed until mapping or maybe
not at all when the element can deal with the different memory blocks.
Make it possible to configure a GDestroyNotify and user_data for
gst_memory_new_wrapped() this allows for more flexible wrapping of foreign
memory blocks.
When _clear gets called between _map and _unmap, buffers
will be unreffed. If the adapter was mapped, memory leaks
may occur.
While calling _clear between _map and _unmap does not seem
like such a great idea, this is possible in the audio
encoder base class, as _clear may be called in _finish_frame.
Since the audio encoder relies on flushing to keep track of
timestamps, delaying flushing till after handle_frame seems
dangerous.
So, we unmap on clear, as the next unmap will do nothing.
This makes _clear safe to call between _map and _unmap,
while avoiding leaking the mapped buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=664133
Fixes compiler warnings on OSX:
gstadapter.h:82: warning: type qualifiers ignored on function return type
gstadapter.c:412: warning: type qualifiers ignored on function return type
const gpointer is not the same as gconstpointer or const void *.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=664491
Add an index to gst_buffer_take_memory() so that we can also insert memory at a
certain offset. This is mostly interesting to prepend a header memory block to
the buffer.
Add a function to retrieve a list of buffers containing the first N bytes from
the adapter. This can be done without a memcpy and should make it possible to
transfer the list to a GstBufferList later.
Retain the last scanned buffer entry and offset, so we can resume buffer
scanning there in case of a typical progressive scan.
Also potentially optimize _copy subsequently occurring in that area.
This avoids:
* triple-checking for the GType when type-checking is enabled (see #597260)
* Avoids going through an expensive no-argument checking which landed in
glib-2.22
* Avoids going through 2 extrac functions (g_object_new -> g_object_new_valist)
Clarify byte reader docs a bit: offset is relative to the current
position of the reader, not to the start of the data. Also, the
examples in both the adapter docs and the byte reader docs have
the mask and pattern arguments swapped (see #587561). Spotted
by Carl-Anton Ingmarsson.