Generate win32/common/config.h-new directly from config.h.in,
using shell variables in configure and some hard-coded information.
Change top-level makefile so that 'make win32-update' copies the
generated file to win32/common/config.h, which we keep in source
control. It's kept in source control so that the git tree is
buildable from VS.
This change is similar to the one recently applied to GStreamer
and gst-plugins-good. The previous config.h file in -bad was in
pretty bad shape, so unlike core and base, I didn't attempt to
leave it strictly the same, but fixed it as necessary. Needs
testing I cannot do myself.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=569015
including the following supports and fixes:
* Create DirectFB surfaces from GstBufferPool
* Add NV12 pixel format support
* Don't use the cursor in the exclusive mode
- EnableCusor() can be only used when the administrative mode is set
in DirectFB 1.6.0 and later.
* Support multiple plane rendering for planar color formats
- This accommodates the chroma plane offsets of the framebuffer
in planar formats.
* Invoke SetConfiguration regardless of video mode setting in setcaps()
- SetConfiguration() method should be invoked regardless of
the result of gst_dfbvideosink_get_best_vmode(), since the two are
unrelated.
* Disable DirectFB signal handler
- "--dfb:no-sighandler" option is passed to DirectFBInit().
This prevents DirectFB from trying to kill the process and allows
GStreamer's termination sequence to proceed normally.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703520
Serves as an example of usage of the new mpegts library from an
application.
Will parse/dump all sections received on a bus.
Usage is ./tsparse <any gst-launch line using tsdemux or tsparse>
Examples:
./tsparse file:///some/mpegtsfile ! tsparse ! fakesink
./tsparse dvb://CHANNEL ! tsparse ! fakesink
./tsparse playbin uri=dvb://CHANNEL
./tsparse playbin uri=file:///some/mpegtsfile
...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702724
Exposes various MPEG-TS (ISO/IEC 13818-1) and DVB (EN 300 468) Section
Information as well as descriptors for usage by plugins and applications.
This replaces entirely the old GstStructure-based system for conveying
mpeg-ts information to applications and other plugins.
Parsing and validation is done on a "when-needed" basis. This ensures
the minimal overhead for elements and applications creating and using
sections and descriptors.
Since all information is made available, this also allows applications
to parse custom sections and descriptors.
Right now the library is targeted towards parsing, but the structures
could be used in the future to allow applications to create and inject
sections and descriptors (for usage by various mpeg-ts elements).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702724
It's not developed any more and replaced by the
libschroedinger-based elements in gst-plugins-good.
(The libschroedinger 1.0.9 release notes state "This
is an exciting release: most of the encoding tools in
dirac-research have been ported over to Schrödinger, so
now schro has the same or better compression efficiency
as dirac-research.")
TRM IDs are MusicBrainz' old audio fingerprinting system from
Relatable, they were phased out in favour of MusicIPs PUIDs.
https://wiki.musicbrainz.org/History:TRM
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.
This adds a video platform backend for the dispmanx display manager used by
broadcom and the Raspberry Pi.
Signed-off-by: Julian Scheel <julian@jusst.de>
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.