When making a copy of the memory allocated from the default memory allocator,
make sure the new copy has the same alignment as the original memory.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680796
We only deal in TIME format ourselves, but if the subclass can handle
converting other formats into TIME format, we can support that too.
Fixes seeking in DEFAULT (sample) format with flacparse,
and the flacdec unit test.
Elements such as the GstIirEqualizerNBands would so far not store the properties
of their children. Now we also grab the properties of child elements and try to
restore them.
Only one STREAM_START event should be let through, else it will
confuse downstream elements that think a new stream is starting
whereas in fact we are just switching to a different input.
In the future we might want to let them through but with the same
sequence number.
Sometimes a transform filter would need the buffer pool or the memory
allocator negotiated by the base class, for example, for querying different
parameters, such as a bigger number of buffers to allocate by the buffer pool.
This patch expose a two getters accessors: one for the buffer pool and the
other for the memory allocator.
Sometimes the sources would use the buffer pool or the memory allocator for
something else than just allocating output buffers; for example, querying for
different parameters, such as a bigger number of buffers to allocate by the
pool.
This patch expose a two getters accessors: one for the buffer pool and the
other for the memory allocator.
Not so useful: just adds/reads stuff from an internal GList without
actually doing anything with those paths, so remove for now:
gst_registry_add_path
gst_registry_get_path_list
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=608841
No longer accept any old GObjects. This makes things nicer for
bindings. If a utility function that handles both nicely
is deemed worthwhile, we can still add one to gstutils.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681681
Don't just return FALSE for seek events with negative rates when
operating in push mode. An upstream demuxer may support this just
fine, so if we're not operating in pull mode always check upstream
first if it can handle the seek event. This fixes reverse playback
where the upstream demuxer supports it (e.g. with qtdemux). The
same code would work fine in 0.10, because baseparse will just
call the default pad event handler if FALSE was returned from the
baseparse event handler, and the pad event handler will just
forward it upstream. In 0.11 the baseclass or subclass is
responsible for chaining up to the parent class or forwarding the
event upstream in any case.
Disable reverse playback in pull mode for now, there seems to
be something going wrong with the segment configuration in that
case.
Add an alternative version of gst_pad_check_reconfigure that doesn't
clear the reconfigure flag.
Useful for increasing error resilience without duplicating the
reconfigure code in pad task functions.
API: gst_pad_needs_reconfigure
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681198
GObject Introspection does not support macros.
This is needed for bindings. We can still add back
macros or inline functions again later if we think
it's worth it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=678301
When max_buffers > 0 and the pool is empty, actually try to allocate more
buffers up to the max_buffers limit.
We need to add a counter for this to count how many buffers we allocated and
check this against the max_buffers limit.
Reorganise and clean up some code.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681153
No need to use a custom main context and custom timeout sources,
just use g_socket_condition_timed_wait() instead, which was added
for exactly this case.
Also seems to help with the unit test deadlocking with glib 2.33.x
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681575
Our check would make sure that GLib segfaults when
someone tries to instantiate an abstract type, which
is an extremely useful thing to check for.
In newer GLibs this is fixed and we get an abort with
a g_error() now it seems, so let's just remove this
check entirely.