It's been replaced by NVENC/NVDEC and even NVIDIA doesn't
support VDPAU any longer and hasn't for quite some time.
The plugin has been unmaintained and unsupported for a very
long time, and given the track record over the last 10 years
it seems highly unlikely anyone is going to make it work well,
not to mention adding plumbing for proper zero-copy or
gst-gl integration.
Closes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/issues/828
The VCD source was ported in 2014 (commit 89eb1e9), but the necessary
"cdxaparse" plugin, which is used to "Parse a .dat file (VCD) into
raw mpeg1" was never ported.
This means that the probable main user for the feature, totem, hasn't
actually been able to play back VCDs, since 2012, when it switched to
using GStreamer 1.0.
Note that even if cdxaparse was finally ported, a lot of work would
still be necessary before it is considered usable. Notably, it is
missing disc image support [1] and some VCDs just cannot be opened for
reading [2].
[1]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/issues/898
[2]: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-plugins-bad/issues/899
This is a simple Bin that will expose audiotestsrc or videotestsrc
based on what is asked by the user either through the GstURIHandler
API or through the "stream-types" property.
This element also provides GstStream and GstStreamCollection
so it is nicely usable from playbin3.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=795366
This regression was caused by the renaming of plugin-sdp into
plugin-sdpelem. The doc reference needed an update. Also, add the old
xml to the cruft file list.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=779344
This element transforms a given number of input channels into a given number of
output channels according to a given transformation matrix. The matrix
coefficients must be between -1 and 1. In the auto mode, input/output channels
are automatically negotiated and the transformation matrix is a truncated or
zero-padded identity matrix.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777376
If they were not ported after 4+ years it seems unlikely that anybody is
ever going to need them again. They're still in the GIT history if
needed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774530
This was used by MSN messenger in prehistoric times, it's safe
to say no one needs or wants this any more these days. For
decoding old recordings there's still a decoder in ffmpeg.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=597616
It only offers one metric for now, "dssim", available if
https://github.com/pornel/dssim was installed on the system
at the time the plugin was compiled.
The spearman correlation for dssim against the TID2008 dataset
is 0.81, against 0.70 for the old ssim implementation, and
it runs 15 times faster.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751324
Without setting the DRM_CLIENT_CAP_UNIVERSAL_PLANES capability bit, only
overlay planes are made available for compatibility with legacy clients.
But if a CRTC doesn't have an overlay plane associated, then kmssink is
not able to find a plane for the CRTC and the pipeline will fail, i.e:
ERROR kmssink gstkmssink.c:482:gst_kms_sink_start:<kmssink0> Could not find a plane for crtc
This patch adds a plane-id property to the kmssink element so a specific
plane can be used in case that a CRTC has only a primary plane associated.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768183
This is an automatic update with manual merges of running
"make update" in the doc/plugins directory. This should help
later maintenance of the plugins doc. A lot of plugin are
not referenced yet in the doc. Will come later.
cvPyrSegmentation() has been deprecated in OpenCV 3.0, and there isn't any
function to replace it. Deleting this element so we can support OpenCV 3.1
without build issues.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760473
New subclass with a similar behaviour as the old liveadder, but
a slightly different API as the latency is in nanoseconds, not
milliseconds. Also, the new liveadder has a effective latency that
is latency + output-buffer-duration. In practice, just setting a non-zero
latency with the new audiomixer gives you the right behavior in 99% of the
cases.