If, for example, we are accumulating rounding errors from the buffer
duration when calculating the PTS/DTS, it can happen that the buffer
thinks it should be presented before it's decoded. In that case we just
clamp the DTS.
It fixes below gir warnings.
../subprojects/gstreamer/gst/gstevent.c:2246: Warning: Gst:
gst_event_new_instant_rate_sync_time: unknown parameter
'rate_multiplier' in documentation comment, should be 'rate'
../subprojects/gstreamer/gst/gstevent.c:2296: Warning: Gst:
gst_event_parse_instant_rate_sync_time: unknown parameter
'rate_multiplier' in documentation comment, should be 'rate'
After release bison 2.5 the declaration %pure-parser was deprecated
in favor of %define api.pure
Nonetheless, until bison 3.4, the declaration was treated as backward
compatibility, but now bison shows a warning:
warning: deprecated directive, use ‘%define api.pure’
The patch's approach is to handle both directives according with the
used bison's version, by string replacement at source configuration
stage.
When playing gapless there were situations when some sticky events
like tags were stuck at some pad and then revived much later.
Therefore it is better to clear them upon stream-start.
Fixes#360
Post instant-rate-request message when receiving an instant-rate-change
event, and handle the incoming instant-rate-sync-time events from the
pipeline.
A seek with that flag set must be non-flushing, not change the playback
direction and start/stop position. A seek handler will then send the new
GST_EVENT_INSTANT_RATE_CHANGE event downstream for downstream elements
to immediately apply the new playback rate before the new in-band segment
event arrives.
`g_object_notify()` actually takes a global lock to look up the
`GParamSpec` that corresponds to the given property name. It's not a
huge performance hit, but it's easily avoidable by using the
`_by_pspec()` variant.
This reverts a96002bb28, which is not
necessary anymore. If we release the pad after removing it then none of
the deactivation code will actually be called because the pad has no
parent anymore, and we require a parent on the pad for deactivation to
happen.
This can then, among other things, cause a streaming thread to be still
stuck in a pad probe because the pad was never flushed, and waiting
there forever because now the pad will actually never be flushed anymore.
If a pad is currently being released we don't want to forward the
FLUSHING flow return but instead consider it as NOT_LINKED. FLUSHING
would also cause upstream to be FLUSHING.
This part was missed in a3c4a3201a and
resulted in a different (and wrong) workaround in
a96002bb28.
Otherwise we're not guaranteed to read the very latest value that
another thread might've written in there when the pad was released, and
could instead work with an old value.
This can be made to work in certain circumstances when
cross-compiling, so default to not building g-i stuff
when cross-compiling, but allow it if introspection was
enabled explicitly via -Dintrospection=enabled.
Fixes#454 and #381.
If the expected size is bigger than the actual buffer size, it would
memcmp random memory which could lead to crashes instead of proper error
reporting.
The argument must be at least a GObject according to the GstLogFunction
definition, and while the default C log function handles miniobjects
just fine this is crashing bindings and user-supplied log functions that
(rightfully) don't expect anything but GObjects.
Not posting DEVICE_ADDED messages while a device provider is being
started makes things awkward for applications, as they have to call
get_devices() after starting the monitor.
This requires redundant code on the application side, and as far as
I understand also could cause race conditions, when a device gets
added between the calls to gst_device_monitor_start() and
gst_device_monitor_get_devices(), causing the application to "see"
the same device twice.
The virtual method named `get_caps` in both `GstBaseSrc` and
`GstBaseSink` has a `filter` parameter which can be `NULL` (the
default implementation in GstBaseSrc already considers the case).
Before this commit, there was no gtk-doc annotation representing this
fact, which caused the corresponding entry in the GIR file to also
miss this fact.
This caused bugs in other places, such inducing the Vala compiler to
introduce a wrongly assert on `(filter != NULL)` in every
implementation of the `get_caps` method implemented in Vala.
By passing NULL to `g_signal_new` instead of a marshaller, GLib will
actually internally optimize the signal (if the marshaller is available
in GLib itself) by also setting the valist marshaller. This makes the
signal emission a bit more performant than the regular marshalling,
which still needs to box into `GValue` and call libffi in case of a
generic marshaller.
Note that for custom marshallers, one would use
`g_signal_set_va_marshaller()` with the valist marshaller instead.
gst_pad_iterate_internal_links is usually used to find a single internal
link that a pad has, e.g. to find the corresponding pad of a multiqueue.
Added a helper function that will return either a single internal link,
if there's no other, or NULL.
In cases with many long-lived buffers that have qdata only very
briefly, the memory overhead of keeping an array of 16 GstQData
structs for each buffer can be significant. We free the array when
the last qdata is removed, like it was done in 1.14.
Fixes#436
This patch simply add a null check around a case where a child may have
been unparented concurrently to the deep_add_remove operation. This was
found by accident in the form of an "IS_GST_OBJECT" assertion, but had
no other known side effect in that test.
../libs/gst/check/libcheck/check.c:617:15: error: result of comparison of constant 4294967295 with expression of type 'clockid_t' is always false [-Werror,-Wtautological-constant-out-of-range-compare]
if (clockid == -1) {
~~~~~~~ ^ ~~
Silence -Wformat-nonliteral warnings from the internal copy of libcheck
../subprojects/gstreamer/libs/gst/check/libcheck/check.c:379:29: warning: format string is not a string literal [-Wformat-nonliteral]
vsnprintf (buf, BUFSIZ, msg, ap);
^~~
../subprojects/gstreamer/libs/gst/check/libcheck/check_error.c:48:21: warning: format string is not a string literal [-Wformat-nonliteral]
vfprintf (stderr, fmt, args);
^~~
../subprojects/gstreamer/libs/gst/check/libcheck/check_str.c:92:29: warning: format string is not a string literal [-Wformat-nonliteral]
n = vsnprintf (p, size, fmt, ap);
^~~
`g_object_notify()` actually takes a global lock to look up the
`GParamSpec` that corresponds to the given property name. It's not a
huge performance hit, but it's easily avoidable by using the
`_by_pspec()` variant.
Concurrent Windows' colored debug message and g_print will print
string hard to read. Instead, use gst_print* which serialize
debug output and the APIs call.
On Windows, concurrent colored gstreamr debug output and usual
stdout/stderr string will cause broken output on terminal.
Since it's OS specific behavior, that's hard to completely avoid it
but we can protect it at least among our printing interfaces side.