Publish the playback offset for and duration into the
splitmuxsink-fragment-closed bus message as each fragment
finishes.
These can be passed to splitmuxsrc via the 'add-fragment'
signal to avoid splitmuxsrc measuring all files on startup
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7053>
Add a signal that allows adding fragments with a specific offset
and duration directly to splitmuxsrc's list. By providing the
fragment's offset on the playback timeline and duration directly,
splitmuxsrc doesn't need to measure the fragment making for faster
startup times.
Add a bus message that's published when fragments are measured,
reporting the offset and duration, so they can be cached by an
application and used on future invocations.
Add examples for handling the bus message and using the 'add-fragment'
signal.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/7053>
The aim of this example is to show how to make use of the accept-certificate
signal from a GTK GUI, and prompt user in case of invalid certificate.
There are two subtleties to be aware of:
1. the signal is emitted from the GStreamer streaming thread, therefore the
caller can't modify the GUI straight away, instead they must do it from the
main thread (eg. by using g_idle_add())
2. in case of a redirection, then a TLS failure, the caller won't know
about the redirection. Actually, it's possible to be notified of the
redirection by watching "message:element" and inspecting http-headers,
but even in that case, the signal will be received *after* the signal
"accept-certificate" (even though the redirection happened *before*).
This second point is tricky. It's not uncommon to have servers that redirect
http requests to https. So errors of the type "HTTP -> HTTPS -> TLS error"
happen, and if the caller doesn't care about redirection, they might prompt
users with a message such as "TLS error for URL http://...", which wouldn't make
much sense.
This example shows how to handle that right, by connecting to the signal
"message:element", inspecting the http-headers, and in case of redirection,
updating the TLS error dialog to indicate that the request was redirected.
Here are a few examples of streams that exhibit TLS failure (at the time of
this commit, of course):
* https://radiolive.sanjavier.es:8443/stream: unknown-ca
* https://am981.ddns.net:9005/stream.ogg: unknown-ca
* http://stream.diazol.hu:7092/zene.mp3: redir then bad-identity
* https://streaming.fabrik.fm/izwi/echocast/audio/index.m3u8: unknown-ca
(this one is a HLS stream)
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4925>
In order to provide build and provide the jack plugin with the prebuilt
binaries of gstreamer we distribute with releases, we can not depend
on an external dependency nor can we ship plugins linking to libraries
we don't provide.
We can also not provide jack ourselves, as it would likely cause a
mismatch with the jack daemon on the host.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/4350>
- Based heavily on the existing Qt5 integration however:
- The sharing of OpenGL resources is slightly different
- The integration with the scengraph is a bit different
- Wayland, XCB and KMS have been smoke tested. Android, MacOS/iOS,
Windows may or may not work.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/3281>