Only accept alpha if downstream has alpha as well. It could
theoretically accept alpha unconditionally if blending is
properly implemented for handle it but at the moment this
is a missing feature.
Improves the caps query by also comparing with the template
caps to filter by what the subclass supports.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754465
Before aggregator based elements always started at running time 0,
now it's possible to select the first input buffer running time or
explicitly set a start-time value.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749966
The problem here was that after removing the formats and
all the things we could convert, we then intersected these
caps with the template caps.
Hence if a subclass offered permissive sink templates
(eg all the possible formats videoconvert handles), but only
one output format, then at negotiation time getcaps returned
caps with the format restricted to that format, even though
we do handle conversion.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751255
When set, it causes videoaggregator to repeatedly aggregate the last buffer on
an EOS pad instead of skipping it and outputting silence. This is useful, for
instance, while playing back files seamless one after the other, to avoid
videoaggregator ever outputting silence (the checkerboard pattern).
It is to be noted that if all the pads on videoaggregator have this property set
on them, the mixer will never forward EOS downstream for obvious reasons. Hence,
at least one pad with 'ignore-eos' set to FALSE must send EOS to the mixer
before it will be forwarded downstream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748946
Add preserve_update_caps_result boolean on the class to allow
sub-classes to disable videoaggregator removing sizes and framerate
from the update_caps() return result.
A return value of GST_FLOW_OK with a NULL buffer from get_output_buffer()
means the sub-class doesn't want to produce an output buffer, so
skip it.
If gst_videoaggregator_do_aggregate() generates an error, make sure
to propagate it - don't just ignore and discard the error by
over-writing it with the gst_pad_push() result.
This would've also triggered if for some reason the segment was updated
in such a way that PTS went backwards, but the running time increased. Like
what happens when non-flushing seeks are done.
We're doing a proper buffer-from-the-past check a few lines below based on the
running time, which is the only time we should care about here.
And keep on querying upstream until we get a reply.
Also, the _get_latency_unlocked() method required being calld
with a private lock, so removed the _unlocked() variant from the API.
And it now returns GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE when the element is not live as
we think that 0 upstream latency is possible.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745768
In case the original caps were missing some optional fields like
interlace-mode. We assume default values for those everywhere,
but they can still cause negotiation to fail if a downstream element
expects the field to be there and at a specific value.
If the src framerate and videoaggreator's output framerate were
different, then we were taking every single buffer that had duration=-1
as it came in regardless of the buffer's start time. This caused the src
to possibly run at a different speed to the output frames.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744096
This can happen if this is a live pipeline and no source produced any buffer
and sent no caps until an output buffer should've been produced according to the
latency.
This fix is similar in spirit to commit be7034d1 by Sebastian for audiomixer.
Unset out buffer in clip function when we unref the buffer to be
clipped, otherwise aggregator will continue to use the already-
freed buffer. Fixes crash when buffers without timestamps are
being fed to aggregator. Partly because aggregator ignores the
error flow return.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743334
When this is TRUE, we really have to produce output. This happens
in live mixing mode when we have to output something for the current
time, no matter if we have enough input or not.
This removes the uses of GAsyncQueue and replaces it with explicit
GMutex, GCond and wakeup count which is used for the non-live case.
For live pipelines, the aggregator waits on the clock until either
data arrives on all sink pads or the expected output buffer time
arrives plus the timeout/latency at which time, the subclass
produces a buffer.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741146