For audio we copy metas that have no tags at all, or that only have the
"audio" and/or "audio-channels" tag. Audio codecs don't change the
audio aspect of the stream and in almost all cases don't change the
number of channels. They might however change the sample rate (e.g.
Opus). Subclasses that change the number of channels will have to
override ::transform_meta() accordingly.
For video we copy metas that have no tags at all, or that only have the
"video" and/or "video-size" and/or "video-orientation" tag. Video codecs
don't change the "video" aspect of the stream and in almost all cases
don't change the resolution or orientation. Subclasses that rescale or
change the orientation will have to override ::transform_meta()
accordingly.
See https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-good/-/merge_requests/576#note_610581
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-base/-/merge_requests/801>
When receiving an instant-rate-change event, store the updated
seek flags and replace the flags in any input segments with them
to allow for instant switching between trickmodes and not.
It's possible that a buffer might be within the segment proper,
but not within the "valid" part we're playing, which is only
things after the 'offset' part of the segment. In that case,
the running-times of the buffer-start and buffer-stop will be
GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE, and we'd better not schedule playback that
far in the future.
This function might be revisited with different channel position mapping
while audio source goes into play so the reorder flag needs to be reset
before the checks happen.
Instead initialize the map infos, etc to NULL like gst_buffer_map()
would be doing on a zero-sized buffer.
This fixes a crash in audioresample if the first output buffer would
contain zero samples.
Similar to gst_video_info_from_caps() which allows encoded video format,
don't error gst_audio_info_from_caps() with encoded audio format.
Because gst_audio_info_set_format() supports encoded format, current
behavior does not seem to be consistent.
The newly exposed vmethods are pause, resume, stop and clear_all.
The existing reset vmethod is deprecated.
The audio sink will fallback to calling reset if pause or stop
are not provided and will fallback to calling start if
resume is not provided. There is no default clear_all
implementation.
Existing audio sinks continue to work as before.
This change is useful for sinks that need to distinguish
between a pause and a stop (currently both are handled
by a reset) and is needed for https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788362https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=788361
Universal Windows Platform apps are not allowed to use LoadLibrary to
load arbitrary DLLs from the filesystem. They can only use
LoadPackagedLibrary to load DLLs that have been packaged with the app
as assets.
See also: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/merge_requests/190
If the remainder is not evenly divisable by 4, we'd miss the check
for zero and continue the loop until crashing. Change the branch
to take into account negatives as well.
This more closely matches the SSE loop.
Matroskademux will send gap event when lag of video and audio is over 3 seconds.
audiodecoder needs to handle gap event and set default output caps.
Only audio info is set, while output caps is ignored. This cause the assertion failed.
Need to fill output caps in gst_audio_decoder_negotiate_default_caps() with
negotiated caps to avoid critical info printed when check it later.
While we can convert between all formats apart from the rate, we
actually need to make sure that we comply with a) the rate of the first
configured pad and b) also all the allowed rates from downstream.
We were previously only fixating the rate in the getcaps
implementation when downstream was requiring a discrete value,
causing negotiation to fail when upstream was capable of rate
conversion, but not made aware that it had to occur.
Instead of fixating the rate, we can simply update our sink
template caps with whatever GValue the downstream caps are holding
as their rate field.
Allows negotiation to successfully complete with pipelines such as:
audiotestsrc ! audio/x-raw, rate=48000 ! audioresample ! audiomixer name=m ! \
audio/x-raw, rate={800, 1000} ! autoaudiosink \
audiotestsrc ! audio/x-raw, rate=44100 ! audioresample ! m.
Since we started depending on GLib 2.44, we can be sure this macro is
defined (it will be a no-op on compilers that don't support it). For
plugins we should just start using `G_DECLARE_FINAL_TYPE` which means we
no longer need the macro there, but for most types in base/gst-libs we
don't want to break ABI, which means it's better to just keep it like it
is (and use the `#ifdef` instead).
The code for this is mostly lifted from audiobuffersplit, it
allows use cases such as keeping the buffers output by compositor
on one branch and audiomixer on another perfectly aligned, by
requiring the compositor to output a n/d frame rate, and setting
output-buffer-duration to d/n on the audiomixer.
The old output-buffer-duration property now simply maps to its
fractional counterpart, the last set property wins.