pyg_boxed_new cause a memory leak if it hold a copy of the boxed wrapper and freed when the wrapper is deallocated.
use the boxed wrapper value itself and don't hold a copy of the value.
The Problem is, that in the current state it is not easily possible to
edit the buffer data in a gstreamer python element since you get a copy
of the real buffer.
This patch overrides the mapinfo and the function generating it in a way
so that mapinfo.data is now a memoryview pointing to the real buffer.
Depending on the flags given for this buffer the memoryview is r/w.
We have notified application developers this would happen a long time
ago and python2 is going to be deprecated very soon now, before 1.18
is going to be released.
This is needed to support matrix. Otherwise, getting
a matrix would remove the rows envelopess, which would
make the "cast" fails, since it would not know if the
internal rows are ValueArray or ValueList. I think reading,
modifying and setting back the matrix is an important use
case.
This patch adds overrides to support IntRange, Int64Range, DoubleRange,
FractionRange, Array and List. For integer ranges, it maps this
to python 'range'. Gst.IntRange() and Gst.Int64Range() are simple cast
to let the underlying code know which GType to use. To set such range in
python you will do:
structure["range"] = Gst.IntRange(range(0,10,2)))
Same for the 64 bit variant. And when you do:
r = structure.get_value("range")
A range will be returned directly, without the wrapper. For DoubleRange
and FractionRange, there is no native support in python. So the usage
will be:
structure["range"] = Gst.DoubleRange(0,10.0)
structure["range"] =
Gst.FractionRange(Gst.Fraction(1/30), Gst.Fraction(1/5)
When getting this value, Gst.DoubleRange and Gst.FractionRange class are
returned. They both have start/stop members. The naming was taken from
range type.
For Array and List, both uses the native list type, though they can be
constructed from any python sequence. So again, the class is just like
a cast, to let it pick the right GType and python list are being
returned.
structure["list"] = Gst.ValueList([1,2,3,4])
structure["array"] = Gst.ValueArray([1,2,3,4)
Using string and tuple could also work. Since Gst.ValueList/Array are
sequence, you can convert one to the other with:
list = Gst.ValueList([1,2,3,4])
array = Gst.ValueArray (list)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753754
PyMethodDef arrays are supposed to end with an entry full of NULL/0 values.
This is missing in gst-python in the file gstmodule.c.
This causes out of bounds memory reads which can be seen / tested by compiling
gst-python with address sanitizer (-fsanitize=address in CFLAGS/LDFLAGS).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762766
The FSF has moved since these files were created. Update the address, in
order to keep packaging tools such as rpmlint quiet.
Signed-off-by: Simon Farnsworth <simon.farnsworth@onelan.co.uk>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=715182