* Fix typo
s/nunormalized/normalized/g
* Update GstVideoMasteringDisplayInfo description
Each values are not array.
* Add missing newline between arguments description and
detailed comment.
The gltestsrc element was refactored to inherit from this base class which
handles the GL context. The sub-class only needs to implement the gl_start,
gl_stop and fill_gl_memory vfuncs, along with properly advertizing the GL APIs
it supports through the supported_gl_api GstGLBaseSrc class attribute.
The caps and thus the video info have preference. If the field order is
set in there then it applies to all frames.
This works around issues where the tff field order is only set in the
caps but not additionally in the buffer flags.
In this mode, buffer timestamps are displayed as an absolute date
since a user-specifiable epoch. The format is also specifiable as
a string property, that will be passed to g_date_time_format().
Commit c71dd72b "gl/wayland: fix glib mainloop integration" was overeager
in removing the poll result test from the check function. This caused
dispatch to be called even if no new events are available on the
Wayland connection, which in turn would wake up the glib mainloop,
causing effectively a tight loop without ever blocking on the poll.
Fixes#603
If we do, then multiple disjoint OpenGL contexts will not perform the
necessary download and reupload of data that is necessary to cross between
each OpenGL context sharegroup.
basedepayload generates its own segment in a pretty unconventional
manner, relying on information in the caps such as npt-start or
npt-stop, usually set by rtspsrc.
In ONVIF mode, rtspsrc will generate the correct segment and this
logic in rtpbasedepayload will not be needed, this commit allows
rtspsrc to signal that through the caps.
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.
... and also as known as ITU-T H.273.
The conversion has been handled per plugin for now. That causes
code duplication a lot also some plugins might not be updated with newly introduced
color{matrix,transfer,primaries} enum value(s).
Instead of handling it per plugin, centralized handling can remove such
code duplication and make plugins be up-to-dated.
The extmap attribute allows mapping RTP extension header IDs to
well-known RTP extension header specifications. See RFC8285 for details.
We store the extmap attribute either as string in the caps
extmap-X=extensionname
where X is the integer extension header ID, or as 3-tuple of strings
extmap-X=<direction,extensionname,extensionattributes>
where direction or extensionattributes are allowed to be the empty
string.
Both formats are allowed because usually only the extension name is
given and it's much simpler to handle in caps.
By suggesting possible detection too early, it's possible that
the wrong format is detected. Hold off making suggestions until one
of the following conditions is met:
* Probability > GST_TYPE_FIND_LIKELY
* At least MPEG_MIN_PROBE_LENGTH bytes have been examined
* EOS, in which case the best guess wins
Fixes#628
We use this property in gst_gl_display_egl_from_gl_display, to set
foreign_display for the new GstGLDisplayEGL instance. This fixes a
problem where gst_gl_display_egl_finalize calls EglTerminate on a
pre-existing EGL connection.
It seems that eglCreatePlatformWindowSurfaceEXT is failing (with
EGL_BAD_ALLOC) because it thinks an EGL surface has already been created
for the wl_egl_window. The reason is that the "driver_private" field of
the wl_egl_window is getting clobbered by the function
wl_proxy_set_queue().
Since a wl_egl_window is not a wl_proxy, it shouldn't be passed to
wl_proxy_set_queue(). It just wraps a wl_surface (which is a wl_proxy).
And it looks like the queue for that surface is getting set earlier on
in the function anyway.
See https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-base/issues/621#note_184582
Body_offset mean that so much data have been written.
Without this patch n_vectors somtimes becomes one more than it should
and then there will be an vector that have a random size causing
writev_bytes to cause a "Bad address" error.
This patch fixes the following critical warning:
CRITICAL **: 11:33:32.843: Unknown GL format 0x0 provided
It would happen during the setup of a second pipeline involving the DMABuf
uploader, typically with a v4l2src element. The warning was raised because the
uploader had a cached EGLImage already filled but the formats were not
synchronized accordingly.
The "field-order" is related for all interlace_mode modes except the
"progressive" mode. So instead of or'ing each mode we can use the
already supported GST_VIDEO_INFO_IS_INTERLACED macro.