Apart from just adding detection of the proper stream type, we also need to only
output the first substream (0x71) which contains the core substream.
While this does not provide *full* DTS-HD support (since it will miss the complementary
substreams), it will still work in the way legacy (non-DTS-HD) bluray players would work.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=725563
Presence of picture extension header identifies the stream as mpeg2.
We are supposed to set the mpegversion to 2 if there is a picextension
instead of blindly setting the version to 1
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=726028
Keep a list of current global tags around and push them
whenever a new stream is started. Also convert all stream
specific tags to global as they are stream specific for
the container, so they are global for the streams from
within that container.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=644395
The PAT is related to the stream, we therefore want it cleared along
with anything stream related.
This commented section was from the (old) mpegtsparse and *might* have
been related to speeding up DVB start-up. But we have another plan for that.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724716
The requested TS might be beyond the last observed PCR. In order to calculate
a coherent offset, we need to use the last and previous-to-last groups.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721035
The muxer is now able to include DVB sections in the transport stream.
The si-interval property will determine how often the SI tables are
muxed into the stream.
The section is handled by the mpeg-ts library. Below is a small example
that will include a Netork Information Table with a Network Name
descriptor in the stream.
GstMpegTsNIT *nit;
GstMpegTsDescriptor *descriptor;
GstMpegTsSection *section;
GstElement *mpegtsmux;
gst_mpegts_initialize ();
nit = gst_mpegts_section_nit_new ();
nit->actual_network = TRUE;
descriptor = gst_mpegts_descriptor_from_dvb_network_name ("Network name");
g_ptr_array_add (nit->descriptors, descriptor);
section = gst_mpegts_section_from_nit (nit);
// mpegtsmux should be retrieved from the pipeline
gst_mpegts_section_send_event (section, mpegtsmux);
gst_mpegts_section_unref (section);
The original code (old mpegtsparse) from which this plugin was based on
was dual-licensed. This allowed usage of the code under any of the
licenses (which including LGPL):
"""
* Alternatively, the contents of this file may be used under the terms of
* the GNU Lesser General Public License Version 2 or later (the "LGPL"),
* in which case the provisions of the LGPL are applicable instead
* of those above. If you wish to allow use of your version of this file only
* under the terms of the LGPL, and not to allow others to
* use your version of this file under the terms of the MPL, indicate your
* decision by deleting the provisions above and replace them with the notice
* and other provisions required by the LGPL. If you do not delete
* the provisions above, a recipient may use your version of this file under
* the terms of the MPL or the LGPL.
"""
When refactored (leading to the creation of this new plugin), I chose all
new code to be LGPL-only (which was allowed for pre-existing code) by removing
the MPL sections.
The headers were all updated, but not the plugin license field. This commit
fixes this.
In order to be able to change the caps on multiple capsfilters the
source element needs to be stopped, otherwise it will get a few
reconfigure events and might try to renegotiate while the bin
is still transitioning its caps, leading to a not-negotiated failure
and the image capture won't happen because the source will be
unusable.
The solution is to keep the source in paused while the caps are being
changed in the bin, and then bring the element back to playing once
it is done. Unfortunately this increases the image capture latency,
but it should always work.
A possible improvement to reduce the latency is to add another signal
to be called before 'start-capture': 'prepare-capture'. At this step
the camera source should set all caps it needs and get the source
ready for doing the capture as soon as 'start-capture' is called.
This can be done on a future commit
* stream-start-id is mandatory at the beginning, so add that to the
gdp headers
* caps must be sent before new segment, invert the order from legacy
0.10 code
And fix the tests as a ref is now kept for those buffers that compose
the header
It is not perfect but it allows us to be sure that the mandatory 'framerate'
field is present in the caps.
As soon as some information is found in the stream, that will be
updated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=723243
An SEI RBSP could contains more than one SEI message as specified in
7.4.2.3.1.
This commit change the parser API: the gst_h264_parser_parse_sei()
function now create and fill a GArray containing GstH264SEIMessage.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=721715
If the first buffer that we handle for a stream has no timestamp, we
would never consider this pad again for muxing which causes queues to
fill up and pipelines to stall. Instead, try to mux pads with -1
timestamps as soon as possible.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722330
mpeg4videoparse might not push buffers while parsing. If those buffers
contain the DISCONT flag, it gets lost and downstream won't get any
buffer with the flag.
Fix it by adding the DISCONT to the next pushed buffer.
This makes backwards playback work.
Collectpads assumes that it can pass any buffer to the clip function
for adjustment, some of which are artificially injected - so don't
adjust global timestamp tracking there. Instead, only adjust the
buffer timestamps and use them directly in the collection function.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698748
From ETSI EN 300 743 V1.3.1 (2006-11) 7.2.1 Display definition segment specifictations
the parameters of display window are in this order: Xmin, Xmax, Ymin, Ymax.
Signed-off-by: Benjamin Gaignard <benjamin.gaignard@linaro.org>
Signed-off-by: Pierre-Yves Mordret <pierre-yves.mordret@st.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720382
The perspective plugin applies a 2D perspective (also called projective)
transform to the frame buffer.
A perspective transform can be used for instance to perform keystone
correction when playing the content with a video projector.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710810
Conversion to byte-stream/nal crashes without that because the
baseparse frame of all NALUs is finished for the first NALU, then
used again for parsing the second NALU. Just that now the buffer
of the frame is already gone. Instead we create temporary frames
for every NALU.
In case more data than a start code alone is needed to decide whether
it ends a frame, arrange for more input data and decide when available.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711627
When the input buffer is empty and we need more data to determine
whether or not to terminate the previous frame, the last start code
location needs to be set to 4 bytes before the the current position
(size of start_code is 32-bits)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=711627
Force filesink to null before posting video-done to make sure the
file was closed.
Had to do it from a separate thread to avoid calling state_change from
a sync message handler.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=709373
When the frame buffer is AYUV writing all zeros does not set it to
black, in YUV colorspace 0x10 is the black level for luminance and 0x80
is the black level for chrominance.
Fix setting the background to black when the out_frame format is AYUV;
in all the other supported formats zeroing the data with memset is still
the right thing to do.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710392
the initial par_n = par_d = 0; was always overwritten since the switch/case
handles all values
And remove the 0 case (it's the same handling as default)
liveadder sometimes calculates the offsets incorrectly before adding. The
resulting errors can easily be heard when mixing silence with a sine.
I'm not sure what the exact conditions are to trigger this, but it definitively
happens when the buffers of two streams have a different duration and buffer
length and duration don't match exactly for one stream because of rounding
errors (e.g. duration=0:00:00.021333333)
I have to admit, I got lost in the math somewhere but it seems that not
rounding in gst_live_adder_length_from_duration() causes 1 sample overlaps in
consecutive buffers from the same stream.
When using gst_util_uint64_scale_int_round() instead of just truncating the
sine sound correctly again.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708345
It is quite possible that we might get PTS/DTS before the first
PCR/Offset observation.
In order to end up with valid timestamp we wait until at least one
stream was able to get a proper running-time for any PTS/DTS.
Until then, we queue up the pending buffers to push out.
Once we see a first valid timestamp, we re-evaluate the amount of
running-time elapsed (based on returned inital running-time and amount
of data/DTS queued up) for any given stream.
Taking the biggest amount of elapsed time, we set that on the packetizer
as the initial offset and recalculate all pending buffers running-time
PTS/DTS.
Note: The buffer queueing system can also be used later on for the
dvb fast start proposal (where we queue up all stream packets before
seeing PAT/PMT and then push them once we know if they belong to the
chosen program).
This allows:
* Better duration estimation
* More accurate PCR location
* Overall more accurate running-time location and calculation
Location and values of PCR are recorded in groups (PCROffsetGroup)
with notable PCR/Offset observations in them (when bitrate changed
for example). PCR and offset are stored as 32bit values to
reduce memory usage (they are differences against that group's
first_{pcr|offset}.
Those groups each contain a global PCR offset (pcr_offset) which
indicates how far in the stream that group is.
Whenever new PCR values are observed, we store them in a sliding
window estimator (PCROffsetGroupCurrent).
When a reset/wrapover/gap is detected, we close the current group with
current values and start a new one (the pcr_offset of that new group
is also calculated).
When a notable change in bitrate is observed (+/- 10%), we record
new values in the current group. This is a compromise between
storing all PCR/offset observations and none, while at the same time
providing better information for running-time<=>offset calculation
in VBR streams.
Whenever a new non-contiguous group is start (due to seeking for example)
we re-evaluate the pcr_offset of each groups. This allows detecting as
quickly as possible PCR wrapover/reset.
When wanting to find the offset of a certain running-time, one can
iterate the groups by looking at the pcr_offset (which in essence *is*
the running-time of that group in the overall stream).
Once a group (or neighbouring groups if the running-time is between two
groups) is found, once can use the recorded values to find the most
accurate offset.
Right now this code is only used in pull-mode , but could also
be activated later on for any seekable stream, like live timeshift
with queue2.
Future improvements:
* some heuristics to "compress" the stored values in groups so as to keep
the memory usage down while still keeping a decent amount of notable
points.
* After a seek compare expected and obtained PCR/Offset and if the
difference is too big, re-calculate position with newly observed
values and seek to that more accurate position.
Note that this code will *not* provide keyframe-accurate seeking, but
will allow a much more accurate PCR/running-time/offset location on
any random stream.
For past (observed) values it will be as accurate as can be.
For future values it will be better than the current situation.
Finally the more you seek, the more accurate your positioning will be.
The previous code could enter an infinite loop because the adapter state
could get out of sync with its mapped data state after sync was lost.
The code was pretty confusing so it's been rewritten to be clearer.
The easiest way to reproduce the infinite loop is to use the breakmydata
element before tsdemux to trigger a resync.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708161
When outputting in AVC3 stream format, the codec_data should not
contain any SPS or PPS, because they are embedded inside the stream.
In case of avc->bytestream h264parse will push the SPS and PPS from
codec_data downstream at the start of the stream, at intervals
controlled by "config-interval" and when there is a codec_data change.
In the case of avc3->bytstream h264parse detects that there is
already SPS/PPS in the stream and sets h264parse->push_codec to FALSE.
Therefore avc3->bytstream was already supported, except for the stream
type.
In the case of bystream->avc h264parse will generate codec_data caps
from the parsed SPS/PPS in the stream. However it does not remove these
SPS/PPS from the stream. bytestream->avc3 is the same as bytestream->avc
except that the codec_data must not have any SPS/PPS in it.
|--------------+-------------+-------------------|
|stream-format | SPS in-band | SPS in codec_data |
|--------------+-------------+-------------------|
| avc | maybe | always |
|--------------+-------------+-------------------|
| avc3 | always | never |
|--------------+-------------+-------------------|
Amendment 2 of ISO/IEC 14496-15 (AVC file format) is defining a new
structure for fragmented MP4 called "avc3". The principal difference
between AVC1 and AVC3 is the location of the codec initialisation
data (e.g. SPS, PPS). In AVC1 this data is placed in the initial MOOV box
(moov.trak.mdia.minf.stbl.stsd.avc1) but in AVC3 this data goes in the
first sample of every fragment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702004
The prog-map property of mpegtsmux only allows you to group pids together in a program.
The program number set in the PAT/PMT tables cannot be set explicitly.
This patch will set the program number according to the prog-map.
If a program id of 0 is given, the first vacant program number starting from 1 will be used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697239
Some streams had wrong values for the stream_id_extension, make sure
we only remember the valid ones.
For streams with PES_extension_field_length == 0, assume there's nothing
else.
For streams that state they have a TREF extension but don't have enough
data to store it, just assume it was produced by a non-compliant muxer
and skip the remaining data.
Only store remaining data in stream_id_extension_data instead of storing
data we already parse.
The Sequence Header Data Structure STRUCT_C for Advanced Profile
has only a one valid field which is the profile indicator. Don't
use the reserved fields for fps update like Simple/Main profile.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705667
The Sequence Header Data Structure STRUCT_A for advanced profile
may be eight consecutive zero bytes.Don't try to override the
width and height values in this case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705667
AIFF chunk size does not include the chunk header size (8 bytes), so the
SSND data size is equal to the chunk size minus the SSND header size (8
bytes).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705675
Updating caps results in downstream elements potentially reconfiguring themselves
(such as decoders). If we do this in the middle of keyframes, we would result
in those elements being reconfigured and handling garbage until the next keyframe.
Instead of this only send (potentially) new codec_data when we have *both* SPS and
PPS.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705333
If ever we lose sync, we were just checking for the next 0x47 marker ...
which might actually happen within a mpeg-ts packet.
Instead check for 3 repeating 0x47 at the expected packet size interval,
which the same logic we use when we initially look for the packet size.
We were only resetting the first 512 values of the lookup table instead
of the whole 8192.
This resulted in any PCR PID over 0x0200 ... ending up taking the first PCR
table around :(
ATSC ac3 streams are always guaranteed to be AC3 if EAC3 descriptor
is not present
If stream registration id is 'AC-3' then it's also guaranteed to be AC3.
Finally if AC3 descriptor is present it's guaranteed to be AC3.
Only silences a warning, but still.
We know we will not overflow 64 bits, therefore just use direct
multiplication/division instead of the scale method (trims usage from
50 instruction calls to 2/3).
Helps with debugging issues. And also remove unused variable (opcr)
This will also allow us in the future to properly detect:
* random-access location (to enable keyframe observation and
potentially seeking
* discont location (to properly handle resets)
* splice location (to properly handle new stream changes)
If a buffer was entirely clipped out (ie, it's out of the segment
entirely), we'll end up with a NULL buffer, which we don't want
to process/dereference.
The new seek handling re-creates the segment time information once it
has enough information after a seek.
The problem was that we'd completely ignore the requested rate. So store
that and use it in the newly created segment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694369
Make videotestsrc ! interlace ! $anything work again. Problem
was that upstream filter caps were passed which contained
interlace-mode=progressive, which doesn't intersect too well
with interlace's source pad template caps, leading to
not-negotiated errors.
The program_number attribute was overloaded, trying to indicate both
the currently playing program, and the program requested via the
"program-number" property. The end result was that setting the
property didn't work (see #690934).
I added a new requested_program_number field rather than reviving the
current_program_number field because it seemed this would result in
fewer changes overall and be less confusing. It breaks symmetry with
the "program-number" property, but it retains parallels with the likes
of program->program_number.
Because gst_ts_demux_reset is called after the properties have been
parsed, requested_program_number is initialised in gst_ts_demux_init.
Whether this is exactly the right place, I don't know.
Setting the program-number property does not affect which program
is actually being demuxed.
Moving the initialization of the program_number from
gst_ts_demux_reset to gst_ts_demux_init seems to fix this issue.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690934
* Avoids handling twice the same seek (can happen with playbin and files
with subtitles)
* Set the sequence number of the segment event to the sequence number of
the seek event that generated it (-1 for the initial one).
The seeking start time is approximated from the seek offset in bytes
using the accumulated PCR observations, so on a VBR stream there might
be a big difference between the actual PCR and the estimated one after
the seek. This might result in a long wait to skip all out of segments
packets.
Instead we just recalculate the new segment to start at the first PTS
after the seek, so that playback starts immediatly.
The caps should always represent what the user is supposed to see.
So if there is a sequence_display_extension associated with the
stream then use the display_horizontal_size/display_vertical_size
to update the src caps (if they are less than the values provided
by sequence header).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704009
This is actually a workaround (we'll be skipping the upcoming section)
This will only happen for sections where the beginning is located within
the last 8 bytes of a packet (which is the minimum we need to properly
identify any section beginning).
Later we should figure out a way to store those bytes and mark that
some analysis needs to happen. The probability of this happening is
too low for me to care right now and do that fix. There is a good chance
that section will eventually be repeated and won't end up on such border.
* packet.origts is no longer used since the PCR refactoring done ages ago
* known_packet_size is a duplicate of packet_size != 0
* caps was never used outside of the packetizer
Restore the original h264parser behaviour to report cropped dimensions
in size caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694068
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
We had two issues with the previous code:
1) We were badly handling PUSI-flagged packets. We were discarding the
initial data (if pointer != 0) whereas we should have been accumulating
it with the previous data (if there was a continuity of course).
=> First series of information loss
2) We were not checking whether there were more sections after the end
of one (i.e. when the following byte was not a stuff byte).
This fixes those two issues.
Fixes#677443https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677443
Until now we simply ignored those streams (since we couldn't do anything
with it anyway). Now that we have the mpegts library and we offload the
section handling to the application side we can properly identify and
extract them.
By default it is disabled for tsparse and enabled for tsdemux, but there is
a property to change that.
This should open the way to properly handle all private section streams,
including:
* DSM-CC
* MHEG
* Carousel data
* Metadata streams (though I haven't seen any of those in the wild)
* ... And all other specs/protocols making use of those
Partially fixes#560631
Migrate the code to use the new parser API based on GstMpegVideoPacket.
Also try to optimize gst_mpegv_parse_process_config() by using more of
GstMpegVideoPacket and determining the extension_start_code_identifier
prior to calling the parser function for that extension packet.
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
Since we now send all sections to the packetizer, we no longer need to do
anymore in-depth checks for the validity of a section.
The choice boils down to:
1) Is it from a known PES pid ? If so pass it on (which might be just pushing
downstream in the case of tsparse, or accumulating PES data for tsdemux)
2) Is it from a known SI pid ? If so pass it to the section packetizer
We still have some other stream types which haven't been ported, but
we will do so once we have defined the enums in the mpegts library.
Also add some FIXMEs regarding items discovered during analysis
* Only mpeg-ts section packetization remains.
* Improve code to detect duplicated sections as early as possible
* Add FIXME for various issues that need fixing (but are not regressions)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702724
We use add_stream(stream_type:-1) to ensure a programs' PCR Stream is
also taken into account. For most programs this will re-use an
existing ES stream.
So only warn that we are re-adding a stream if it was already present
AND it is not to ensure the PCR stream is taken into account.
Only create subtables when needed. It was previously creating one every
single time ... to check if one was present.
And speed up code to detect whether a subtable was already present or not.
Overall makes section pushing 2 times faster.
In some cases (NIT on highly-populated DVB-C operator for example), there
will be more than one section emitted for the same subtable and version
number.
In order not to lose those updates for the same version number, we checked
against the CRC of the previous section we parsed.
The problem is that, while it made sure we didn't lose any information, it
also meant that if the same section came back (same version, same CRC) later
on we would re-process it, re-parse it and re-emit it.
This version improves on that by keeping a list of previously observed CRC
for identical PID/subtable/version-number and will only process sections if
they really were never seen in the past (as opposed to just before).
On a 30s clip, this brings down the number of NIT section parsing from 4541
down to 663.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=614479
First send stream-start, then caps, then segment.
The segment we push is from upstream in push-mode. If we work in pull-mode
then we initialize the base segment to BYTES.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702422
Sync byte scan is incorrect for M2TS streams because the timestamp 4
bytes were not included in the flush size. This can result in an
infinite loop.
Rework the scan code to be clearer and work in all cases.
By adding the video-source-filter during construction time, rather then
patching it in later (*), we can greatly reduce the amount of caps involved
in negotation, speeding up pipeline creation.
I wrote this while working on speeding up the startup of cheese. My cheese
has been modified to add a capsfilter, filtering for only the configured
resolution, with that cheese patch + this patch, the pipeline creation time
goes from aprox 1.1 seconds to aprox 350ms. This is with a Logitech 9000
pro camera, which supports lots of different resolutions at many different
framerates per resolution, causing a caps "explosion" if not filtered.
*) Note the code for this is left in, as it is still necessary if the
video-source-filter is changed between a stop + re-start.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701953
check_and_replace_src() was setting self->app_vid_src to NULL, which
means that an app setting the video-source property, and then starting,
stopping and re-starting the pipeline (ie to make changes to the
video-source-filter property) would after the restart no longer have
a video-source.
This patch fixes this by making gst_camerabin_setup_default_element return a
ref to the passed in user_element, rather then returning the user_element as
is, so that that ref can be passed on to the bin, and the app_vid_src ref
stays valid.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701915
Current fallback to lost_sync seems to impede a delay to restore
sync. Let the parser parse and skip the private stream.
Here it contains the digital camera brand (in 2010 bytes)
and is repeated twice.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697283
descriptors are stored as a GValueArray of GString. The downside is
that there is no way to "pass" ownership of a GValue to a GValueArray
which previously resulted in expensive copy/free of the (already expensive)
GString.
Here we estimate first the size of the GValueArray, then create it,
then directly use the GValue of that array.
Speeds up total SI parsing by ~30%
If rfb_decoder_new() allocates the decoder sructure, rfb_decoder_free()
should free the structure. We should not free the decoder when an
error occurs during connection - it holds lots of configuration/state
and will be freed later in finalize.
prepare_func will allocate a new buffer to replace the original
one. Instead of using gst_buffer_replace (which causes an extra
refcount increment on the new buffer), we just unref the original
buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=699786
Don't send any source caps yet if we're still in
drop-buffers-until-we-get-a-sequence-header mode.
Fixes transmuxing of many MPEG-TS/PS streams into
formats which require things like width, height or
codec_data on the input caps.
Also fixes issues when using playbin with decoder
sinks that want width/height etc.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695879
Since there is a conflict between the DCII stream type and BluRay
stream types, moved the processing of BluRay-specific stream types
to the beginning of the function. Only if a BluRay stream type
IS NOT found do we proceed to check the rest of the stream type
identifiers
Previous code was also "sort-of" handling a similar conflict between
BluRay AC3 audio and standard AC3 audio. Moved the special case BluRay
AC3 handling in the main switch statement to the new BluRay-specific
switch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697892
The src element may not include information about whether
the data is parsed or not. Hence do not require parsed=false.
Fixes multipartdemux ! jpegparse ! ...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697884
And if we detect a discontinuity there (like... when losing packets
or having MPEGTS over raw UDP with out-of-order packets) we just
drop the corresponding packet.
A future version could try to implement a re-ordering algorithm based
on that, similar to what rtpjitterbuffer does.
Backport fix for crashes and invalid writes in totem from libvisual
in -base, to minimise differences to version in -base and to make
sure the bug doesn't sneak back in later when the base class is
made public.
The shader code looks like it makes assumptions that are not
necessarily always true, even if they're true for now for the
existing elements, namly that pixel stride is 4, for example.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=683527
gst_query_set_nth_allocation_pool() requires there to be a pool in the
query already. This is not always the case when we get the query from
upstream. Use gst_query_add_allocation_pool() instead in such case.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681719
When converting the incoming segment from byte to time format,
don't just convert the start/stop/time values, but also change
the segment format to TIME.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696361
Rework things a bit so that we can run over the midi events and fire callbacks
for each of them. We can then use that for calculating the duration and also for
doing playback.
Only parse as many tracks as specified in the header.
Fix default tempo;
Send MIDI tick events every 10ms
This filter converts interlaced content that was originally
telecine'd from 24 fps (or similar) progressive content. It works
approximately like videorate, but with awareness of interlacing.
It merges neighboring fields in the input interlaced stream with
the goal of minimizing combing artifacts, while keeping the output
framerate constant. If it cannot avoid combing artifacts, it will
reconstruct the image from a single field. Note that this filter
does not autodetect the framerate, but will automatically fixate
at 24 fps.
A non-live element is supposed to continue streaming in the paused state so
don't stop the tasks when going to paused.
We also always want to start the update task after we prerolled enough data,
not only in the playing state.
The current code is memsetting the GstVideoFrame.data address to 0s (which
causes a segfault). This member is actually an array of data buffers (one for
each plane). This fix iterates over each data plane to clear them all.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695655
API is now in baseparse in gstreamer.
Timestamps in MPEG-TS streams are based on the last timestamp
before the start code of the picture. GstBaseParse sets the
timestamp based on the beginning of the sequence header, if
one exists before the picture. This fixes the case where the
timestamp occurs in the MPEG-TS stream between the seq header
and picture start code.
Timestamps in MPEG-TS streams are based on the last timestamp
before the start code of the picture. GstBaseParse sets the
timestamp based on the beginning of the sequence header, if
one exists before the picture. This fixes the case where the
timestamp occurs in the MPEG-TS stream between the seq header
and picture start code.
In the sink event handler we end up sending multiple EOS
events per pad. Don't return FALSE when sending the
second EOS on an already-EOS pad fails. Not sure if there
was a reason for sending a second EOS, so leaving the
code in there for now, but assume all went fine if there
are source pads, which is slightly less wrong than before.
This function needs work.
Otherwise we will intersect with the srcpad template caps and add all the caps fields
that the parser will ever set, no matter if downstream restricts this field or not.
This requires upstream to set this field on the caps to successfully negotiate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690184
This allows filtering out videos for hardware decoders that do not
support GMC at all or only support a limited number of sprite warping
points (usually 1).
A crash occured after pushing buffers and changing mpegtsmux state to
NULL/READ and then back to PLAYING/PAUSED.
The crash was caused by holding a dangling pointer in the MpegTsMux
program table.
Additionally stream headers were leaked when resetting the element:
mux->streamheader set to NULL in mpegtsmux_reset() before it's released
later in the same function.
Added a unit test: test_multiple_state_change
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689107