The set_format vfunc does not pass ownership of the caps
to the decoder, so we mustn't unref the caps there.
gst_event_new_caps() does not take ownership of the caps
passed, so we must unref the caps afterwards.
Fixes leaks when running test in valgrind in 1.4 branch.
Add test to check rendering of overlays of different sizes
that are completely or partially outside the video surface.
Once the overlay is blended to the video, verify if the
position of the blended overlay is as expected, by comparing
the pixels of the blended video with the expected values.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739281
Make an ORC version of the 2x vertical upsampling code.
Improve unit tests, test chroma up and down sampling.
memset buffer in conversion to make valgrind happy.
There don't seem to be any unit tests for the socket handling elements. As
I am about to attempt some refactorings I've added some basic tests which
exercise some of the happy-paths in tcpclientsrc, tcpserversrc,
tcpserversink and tcpclientsink. They should let me know if I've caused
serious breakage.
They are far from exhaustive but are sufficient for me to have caught a few
memory-leaks in the existing code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739544
Combine multiplies in 4x filters.
Rename conversion functions to make them nicer in orc.
Add ORC versions for various downsampling algorithms
Add unit test chroma resampler
Make a more complete pack/unpack test, check if the image after
pack/unpack has the same color and precision, and has correctly
duplicated subsampled pixels.
Add a video scaler object build on top of the resampler. It has
implementation to deal with interlaced video as well as horizontal and
vertical scaling functions.
Move the conversion code used in videoconvert to the video library
and expose a simple but generic API to do arbitrary conversion. It can
currently do colorspace conversion but the plan is to add videoscale to
it as well.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732415
Adds a new test to textoverlay to make sure it can properly handle
elements that have ANY caps but fail to add the overlay meta in
the allocation query.
This test verifies that textoverlay won't use the caps features even
knowing that the overlay meta is accepted when querying the downstream
caps because it also needs downstream to confirm by putting the meta
in the allocation query.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=735800
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
Set up a fakesink with a pad probe to replace the missing encoder to detect
if encoding was really required and only error out in this case. Otherwise
just let passthrough branch work.
This delays the error posting from the set_state function to when buffers
are really flowing. Unit test updated accordingly
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=650652
Make the MIKEY message and payload objects miniobjects so that they have
a GType and are refcounted.
We can reuse the dispose method to clear our payload objects.
Add some annotations.
Implement a copy function for the MIKEY message.
Fix the unit test.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732589
With most decoder libraries, and especially when accessing codecs via
OpenMAX or similar APIs, we don't have the ability to properly related
the output buffers to a number of input samples. And could e.g. get
a fractional number of input buffers decoded at a time.
Previously this would in the end lead to an error message and stopped
playback. Change it to a warning message instead and try to handle it
gracefully. In theory the subclass can now get timestamp tracking
wrong if it completely misuses the API, but if on average it behaves
correct (and gst-omx and others do) it will continue to work properly.
Also add a test for the new behaviour.
We don't change it in the encoder yet as that requires more internal logic
changes AFAIU and I'm not aware of a case where this was a problem so far.
Aggregate buffering messages to only post the lower value
to avoid setting pipeline to playing while any multiqueue
is still buffering.
There are 3 scenarios where the entries should be removed from
the list:
1) When decodebin is set to READY
2) When an element posts a 100% buffering (already implemented)
3) When a multiqueue is removed from decodebin.
For item 3 we don't need to handle it because this should only
happen when either 1 is hapenning or when it is playing a
chained file, for which number 2 should have happened for the
previous stream to finish
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726423
The KEMAC payload actually needs to have subpayloads and the key should
go into the KEY_DATA subpayload. Add support for subpayloads and
implement the KEY_DATA payload.
Add some pointers to the conversion functions that allow us to add
encryption and decryption later.
MIKEY is defined in RFC 3830 and is used to exchange SRTP encryption
parameters between a sender and a receiver in a secure way.
This library implements a subset of the features, enough to implement
RFC 4567, using MIKEY in SDP and RTSP.
Check that even if the subclass doesn't call set_output_format, the base
class should use upstream provided caps to fill the output caps that is
pushed before the gap event is forwarded, otherwise it ends again fixating
the rate and channels to 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722144
Adds a test that simulates a scenario where the first buffers after
a segment can't be decoded and the decoder asks for those frames
to be released. The videodecoder base class should make sure that
the events attached to those first buffers are pushed even if the
buffers aren't going to be.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721835
Add a simple playback test that makes sure that video decoder pushes
buffers in the same order it receives and that it respects the
set timestamps and durations
With the latest GLib, g_source_remove() complains about not finding
the timeout source with the given ID here, since it was already
destroyed by returning FALSE from the timeout callback. Also return
FALSE from the bus watches when we don't want to be called any more.