... to at least having it trigger a/v synchronization, possibly without
using provided values which are still not considered sane
(as previously dropped).
... when operating in non slave mode, and reset if detected.
This should avoid some (large) bogus outgoing timestamp due to jumps
in rtp time, as result of PAUSE/PLAY or seek or ...
... at least if not syncing to NPT time:
* either sync using RTCP SR data (as currently)
* only perform the above once using initial RTCP SR packets
* discard RTCP and sync by equating provided stream's clock-base rtptime,
as provided by jitterbuffer (typically obtained from RTP-Info in RTSP).
This introduces a new bin which wraps around pulsesink and depending on
the formats supported by the sink, plugs in/out a decodebin2 as
required. This allows users to switch sinks on the stream and adapts
accordingly (for example, you could watch a movie in passthrough mode on
your receiver which supports AC3 decode, then plug out and switch to a
non-digital profile to continue uninterrupted on analog output).
The bin is required because doing the same with playbin2/playsink will
require API changes that cannot be made in 0.10. With 0.11/1.0, we
should be able to ask for upstream caps renegotiation to deal with all
this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=657179
Changed the ebml reader's gst_ebml_peek_id_length() function so
that it returns the actual reason for why the peek failed, instead
of (almost) always returning GST_FLOW_UNEXPECTED. This prevents
the pulling task from sending EOS when doing a flushing seek.
matroskademux performs segment tricks to skip gaps in streams,
notably at start for non 0 based files. There may however be
cases when full presentation (including intermediate gaps) is
desired, so a property allows to configure as of which gap
to act (or not at all).
API: GstMatroskaDemux::max-gap-time
Fixes#659009.
Subtract the first timestamp of a stream from all input buffers to
get 0-based timestamps for creating a sane ctts table. Without this
patch the ctts could have larger values than needed, causing the
playback to have a delay at startup.
As the first timestamp is only found after a few buffers are queued
(due to possible reordered buffers), once we find the first timestamp
we subtract it from all buffers on the queue, from that point on,
all buffers have their timestamps subtract when they are collected.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=658659
Frame duration might vary for 1 usecond, in this case matroskamux
decides to create BLOCKGROUP instead of SIMPLEBLOCK.
Convert duration to timecodescale which is (typically) less precise, and
then also allow the difference of 1/-1 to arrange for less sensitive check.
Based on patch by Alexey Fisher <bug-track@fisher-privat.net>
Fixes#653080.