gstrtpjitterbuffer.c: In function 'gst_rtp_jitter_buffer_loop':
gstrtpjitterbuffer.c:2978:3: error: 'result' may be used uninitialized in this function
while (result == GST_FLOW_OK);
^
Several conditional statements perform comparison on RTP sequence
numbers without taking the sequence number rollover into account.
Instead, use the gst_rtp_buffer_compare_seqnum function to perform the
comparison.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725159
If the expected packet (do_next_seqnum is TRUE) is the one we requested
for retranmission earlier, do the logic to update the retransmission
statistics as well before setting up the timers for the next expected
packet.
Also reset the retransmission counter if the timer is reused for another
seqnum.
Use the round-trip-time and average jitter to dynamically calculate the
retransmission interval and expected packet arrival time.
Based on patches from Torrie Fischer <torrie.fischer@collabora.co.uk>
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711412
Don't use the current time calculated from the tmieout loop for when we
last scheduled the NACK because it might be unscheduled because of a max
packet misorder and then we don't accurately calculate the current time.
Instead, take the current element running time using the clock.
Don't reset the expected output seqnum when clearing the pt map because this
could stall the jitterbuffer forever.
Add a unit test for this.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709800
The problem here was that the jitterbuffer lock was unlocked to push
the event, but that caused another thread to remove the timer currently
being processed, probably because the amount of rtx events
(and therefore timers) was getting too high. The solution is to
unlock and push the event only after timer processing has finished.
fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711131
When flush-stop arrives before we process the result of the _push() in the
loop function, we might pause even though we are not flushing anymore. Fix this
race by waiting for the srcpad loop function to completely pause after doing the
flush-start.
If we were not waiting for the missing seqnum when we insert the lost packet
event in the jitterbuffer, we end up not updating the next_seqnum and wait
forever for the lost packets to arrive. Instead, keep track of the amount of
packets contained by the jitterbuffer item and update the next expected
seqnum only after pushing the buffer/event. This makes sure we correctly handle
GAPS in the sequence numbers.
Always prepare a lost event in the jitterbuffer, it is to wake up and make the
pushing thread continue. We drop the event when we are not supposed to push lost
events downstream.
Schedule the lost event by placing it inside the jitterbuffer with the seqnum
that was lost so that the pushing thread can interleave and push it properly.
Make the jitterbuffer operate on a structure containing all the packet
information. This avoids mapping the buffer multiple times just to get the RTP
information. It will also make it possible to store other miniobjects such as
events later.
Improve the order of the timeout events, if there are timers with the same
timeout, we want to trigger the lowest seqnum first. For this we need to loop
over the complete array of timers to find the best one before triggering the
timeout.
First send the lost event, then update the next_seqnum counter and then
send the signal to the pushing thread that it can retry to push a buffer. This
avoids pushing out buffers before the lost event is pushed.
There is no need to unschedule the timer in flush-start, flush-stop will remove
the timers and unschedule.
Unschedule the current timer before attempting to join the timer thread.
Keep a separate delay in the timer so that we still know the original timestamp
of the packet that this timer refers to. We can then place the correct
running-time in the Retransmission event.