This gives more flexibility to the subclasses and permits to remove the
GstVideoAggregatorClass->disable_frame_conversion ugly API.
WARNING: This breaks the API as it removes the disable_frame_conversion
field
API:
+ GstVideoAggregatorClass->find_best_format
+ GstVideoAggregatorPadClass->set_format
+ GstVideoAggregatorPadClass->prepare_frame
+ GstVideoAggregatorPadClass->clean_frame
- GstVideoAggregatorClass->disable_frame_conversion
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740768
Floating point numbers are written differently in different
locales, e.g. in many countries 1/2 = 0,5 instead of 0.5, and
strtod will not be able to parse "0.5" correctly in such a
locale.
If we seek when media is in stop state, playback-test gives
critical error, since context of glimagesink is destroyed during stop.
But since context is not present, we need not handle send_event in glimagesink
Hence adding a condition to check if context is valid.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740305
Otherwise interesting things will happen in Cocoa applications, like
infinite event loops that block the NSApplication loop forever.
This was only needed for GNUStep and thus can safely be removed now.
Until gcc and GNUStep properly support Objective-C blocks and other
"new" features of Objective-C we can't properly support them without
making the code much more ugly.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739152
It's architecture dependent and should not be placed into the include
directory as the assumption is that all those headers are architecture
independent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739767
gst_glimage_sink_handle_events can be called from the overlay interface and from
the main thread before GL is setup. Before this change, that would call
_ensure_gl_setup() and deadlock on OSX.
Change things so that it's always safe to call gst_glimage_sink_handle_events()
without stuff deadlocking.
Remove gst_glimage_sink_handle_events call in gst_glimage_sink_init. It was
unnecessary and when the element was instantiated from the main thread, caused a
deadlock in OSX creating the context (thread).
Otherwise when resizing the window you will also get messages like:
class NSConcreteMapTable autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class NSConcreteValue autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class NSConcreteValue autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
class __NSCFDictionary autoreleased with no pool in place - just leaking
Need to set the ':' as the reshape method now takes one parameter.
For the story, the GstGLNSView was previously inheriting from
NSOpenGLView which has a reshape function without any parameter.
Now the GstGLNSView inherits from NSView and we re-use the reshape
function manually.
Use the reshape function after being defined. The other way
would have been to declare the reshape function in the header.
gstglwindow_cocoa.m: In function '-[GstGLNSView drawRect:]':
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: 'GstGLNSView' may not respond to '-reshape'
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: (Messages without a matching method signature
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: will be assumed to return 'id' and accept
gstglwindow_cocoa.m:555: warning: '...' as arguments.)
GTK-Doc uses a special syntax for code documentation. A multiline comment that
starts with an additional '*' marks a documentation block that will be processed
by the GTK-Doc tools. So GTK-Doc is confused if a comment block starts with that
additional '*' but isn't meant to be processed. Removing this additional '*'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739444
with force-aspect-ratio=true, if the width or height changed, the
viewport wasn't being updated to respect the new video width and height
until a resize occured.