Remove the pt restrictions for all the depayloaders that have an
encoding-name. We can use this to autoplug decoders.
Remove the encoding-name for all the payloaders with a fixed payload
type.
We now either have an encoding-name or a pt in the sinkpad caps of
a depayloader.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639292
encoding name is required in the caps and is a better fit for autoplugging than
the pt value. Hardware manufacturers have a bad habit of skimming through RFCs
and in this case; use unassigned numbers for encoders instead of dynamic
numbers.
In essence, this patch will add support for a lot of Bosch hardware encoders
without breaking autoplugging.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639292
gst-plugins-good/gst/audioparsers/gstsbcparse.c: In function 'gst_sbc_parse_handle_frame':
gst-plugins-good/gst/audioparsers/gstsbcparse.c:210:32: error: 'ch_mode' may be used uninitialized i
Move the code that combines the last SR packet and the current jitterbuffer sync
values into a sync structure, into its own function. We want to reuse this bit
later.
When we make a mapping between an RTP timestamp and an NTP timestamp, include
the downstream latency applied to the sinks. This makes it possible to have
both sinks run with different latencies and still have correct sync on the
client. It also is more correct because the RTP timestamp in the SR report will
actually correspond more closely to the NTP time it was sent on the server.
For pipelines with high latency on the sender side, this actually allows a
GStreamer receiver to perform synchronisation instead of dropping the RTCP
packets.
There is no need to cast the event functions and only causes problems later when
we change the signature later and things silently compiles wrong code.
On Windows and OS/X, _get_available_bytes() may not return the size
of the next pending packet, but the size of all pending packets in
the kernel-side buffer, which might be rather large depending on
configuration. Sanity-check the size returned by _get_available_bytes()
to make sure we never allocate more memory than the max. size for
a packet, if it's an IPv4 socket.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=610364