Remove the format and layout from the mix_samples function and use the
format when creating the channel mixer object. Also use a flag to handle
the unlikely case of non-interleaved samples like we do elsewhere.
Add docs for the internal audioconvert object before moving it to the
audio library.
Remove get_sizes and implement the trivial logic in the element.
Remove some unused orc functions
Move the audio quantize code from audioconvert to the audio library.
work on making an audio converter helper function similar to the video
converter.
Fold fastrandom directly into the quantizer, add some ORC code to
optimize this later.
Rename _get_default_mask() to _get_fallback_mask() to make it more
clear that the function only provides a fallback if nothing else can be
done. Also clarify this in the documentation.
API: gst_audio_channel_get_fallback_mask()
We always require the channel-mapping-field. If it's 0 we require nothing
else, otherwise we need channels, stream-count and coupled count to be
available.
In some conditions we might process empty buffers, calling
gst_control_binding_get_value_array in that case will lead
to the assertion:
(lt-ges-launch-1.0:18859): GStreamer-CRITICAL **: gst_control_binding_get_value_array: assertion 'values' failed
oggdemux is outputting the meta now, and only outputs if it should really
apply to the current buffer. Previously we would skip N samples also if we
started the decoder in the middle of the stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
It is doing the wrong thing because of the Opus pre-skip: while the timestamps
are shifted by the pre-skip, the granule positions are not shifted.
oggmux is doing the right thing here already.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
The first frame has lookahead less samples, the last frame might have some
padding or we might have to encode another frame of silence to get all our
input into the encoded data.
This is because of a) the lookahead at the beginning of the encoding, which
shifts all data by that amount of samples and b) the padding needed to fill
the very last frame completely.
Ideally we would use LPC to calculate something better than silence for the
padding to make the encoding as smooth as possible.
With this we get exactly the same amount of samples again in an
opusenc ! opusdec pipeline.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
... instead of relying on the segment. For the clipping at the start we assume
a proper value in the OpusHead, as generated by opusparse or opusenc.
Transmuxing in general is not guaranteed to produce the correct values, or
even have a OpusHead (e.g. when having RTP input).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
The granulepos does not have the pre-skip subtracted while timestamps do,
and the last granulepos will be shorter by the number of samples that should
be dropped because of padding in the end.
As such, extrapolating the granule of the beginning of the first frame will
lead to a negative value, which is not a problem but intentional.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
Add a TRUNCATE_RANGE flag for unpack functions to fill the least
significate bits with 0 (as did the old code). Also add functions
that don't truncate. Use the TRUNC flag in audioconvert for
backwards compatibility for now.
Use (1 << 31) as the multiplier for int<->float conversions. This makes
sure that int->float conversions always end up with floats between
[-1.0, 1.0].
For the conversion from float to int, this multiplier will give the complete
int range after we perform clipping.
Change the unit test to take this into consideration.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755301
No need to use G_GINT64_FORMAT for potentially negative values of
GstClockTimeDiff. Since 1.6 these can be handled with GST_STIME_ARGS.
Plus it creates more readable values in the logs.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757480