Older versions of flex (before 2.5.36) don't add the prototype, so it must
be added manually. We can't check by the version number, because Debian/Ubuntu
patched it into their 2.5.35 at some point.
This reverts commit 8162a583a4.
Automatically copying the sticky events makes it impossible for apps
and elements to filter the events with event probes. This causes
regressions (See #719437). The best option is to let the app/element
copy and filter the events themselves after the ghostpad target is
set.
Update the sticky events on SRC ghostpads when retargeting. This ensures
that the ghostpad has the exect same sticky events as the target pad. We
don't want to do this for SINK ghostpads, they got the events from
downstream and we don't want to overwrite them with the target pad
events.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=707621
gstutils.c:3659:41: error: format string is not a string literal
[-Werror,-Wformat-nonliteral]
gchar *expanded = g_strdup_vprintf (stream_id, var_args);
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=710621
gst_parse_launchv, gst_parse_launchv_full and gst_parse_launch_full
all return floating refs, the same as gst_parse_launch, which just
calls gst_parse_launch_full internally anyway.
Add a unit test assertion to check it's true.
Spotted by nemequ on IRC.
Wrap caps strings so that it can handle serialization and deserialization
of caps inside caps. Otherwise the values from the internal caps are parsed
as if they were from the upper one
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708772
It was unintuitive that GstContext was actually a list of different
contexts. GstContext now is only a type string and a structure to
contain the actual context.
Non-persistent contexts are removed when elements go back
to NULL state, persistent contexts are not. Applications
most likely want to set persistent contexts.
Since the default number of max unused threads in GThreadPool has been
changed from 0 to 2 it needs to be set to 0 to stop all threads or
valgrind will report them as memory leaks.
This makes gst_parse_bin_from_description() return an element instead of
a bin if there's only one element. Also changed gstparse.c to use this,
so gst-launch won't create superfluous bins.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=703405
The current documentation is controverse, while it states that the
returned value is valid only while the query is is valid, which presumes
a 'transfer none' policy. But the tooltip for the 'out' annotation
states the default is 'transfer-full'.
Add the missing 'transfer none' annotations to fix this.
Tweak the documentation slightly to clarify that the estimated-total in
a a Buffering query the total remaining time of a download, not the
total time for the complete download. Also indicate the unit used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704934
If all stream-start messages had a group id (for backwards compatibility),
we only consider a stream started if all had the same group id.
In 2.0 we should make the group id mandatory.
All streams that have the same group id are supposed to be played
together, i.e. all streams inside a container file should have the
same group id but different stream ids. The group id should change
each time the stream is started, resulting in different group ids
each time a file is played for example.
This makes sure that no bin misses the clock-lost messages, independent
of the state, and could return an old, non-working clock from
gst_bin_provide_clock_func().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701997
Fixes compiler warnings such as
gstallocator.c:61:8: error: conflicting types for 'gst_memory_alignment'
../gst/gstallocator.h:52:18: note: previous declaration of 'gst_memory_alignment' was here
Renegotiation and reconfiguration will fail because all queries
and events won't be accepted by the pad if it's flushing. In the
best case this just causes unneeded work and spurious warnings in
the debug logs, in the worst case it causes elements to fail completely.
When appending/prepending tags, avoid re-creating (and copying) lists if we already
have one and instead just append/prepend the GValue to the list.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702545
Before this patch gst_init would intercept --help, causing for example
cheese's --help to look like this:
[hans@shalem cheese]$ cheese --help
Usage:
cheese [OPTION...] - GStreamer initialization
Help Options:
-h, --help Show help options
--help-all Show all help options
--help-gst Show GStreamer Options
gst_init is the only gfoo_init function which does this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702089
API: gst_value_array_append_and_take_value
API: gst_value_list_append_and_take_value
We were already using this internally, this makes it public for code
which frequently appends values which are expensive to copy (like
structures, arrays, caps, ...).
Avoids copies of the values for users. The passed GValue will also
be 0-memset'ed for re-use.
New users can replace this kind of code:
gst_value_*_append_value(mycontainer, &myvalue);
g_value_unset(&myvalue);
by:
gst_value_*_append_and_take_value(mycontainer, &myvalue);
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701632
But do this only for events that are not dropped by flushing,
i.e. do it only for everything except SEGMENT and EOS.
Without this we might drop a CAPS event if flushing happens
at an unfortunate time and nobody is resending the CAPS event.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=700806
If a pad block was triggered from sending a sticky event downstream, it
could happen that the pad block is relinking pads, which then requires
to resend previous sticky events.
Previous patch was inforcing a complete ordering of the sticky events, while
in fact, only STREAM_START, CAPS and SEGMENT events need proper ordering.
See: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688188
We can prevent buggy element from causing other elements to fail or crash
by sorting sticky event at insertion. In this case, we also warn as this
is not supposed to happen.
See: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688188
Fixes abort when the old specifiers are used. Fix up the conversion
specifier, it would get overwritten with 'c' below to the extension
format char, which then later is unhandled, leading to the abort.
Also fix up and enable unit test for this.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/process_bug.cgi
Source elements with limited bandwidth capabilities and supporting
buffering for downstream elements should set this flag when answering
a scheduling query. This is useful for the on-disk buffering scenario
of uridecodebin to avoid checking the URI protocol against a list of
hardcoded protocols.
Bug 693484
API: GST_PLUGIN_STATIC_DECLARE()
API: GST_PLUGIN_STATIC_REGISTER()
Based on a patch by Håvard Graff <havard.graff@tandberg.com>.
This now allows GST_PLUGIN_DEFINE() to create a static plugin if
GST_PLUGIN_BUILD_STATIC is defined. The resulting plugin can be
statically linked or dynamically linked during compilation but
can't be dynamically loaded during runtime.
Also adds GST_PLUGIN_STATIC_DECLARE() and GST_PLUGIN_STATIC_REGISTER(),
which allows to register a static linked plugin easily.
It is still required to manually register every single statically linked
plugin from inside the application as this can't be automated in a portable
way.
A new configure parameter --enable-static-plugins was added that allows
to build all plugins we build here as static plugins.
Fixes bug #667305.
The gst_plugin_feature_rank_compare_func() should return
negative value, if the rank of both PluginFeatures are equal and
the name of first PluginFeature comes before the second one.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697990
Don't use snprintf(), but use sprintf instead and do our own
length calculations, because glibc may complain about us passing
%n in a format string if the string is in writable memory, and
here the format string is always in writable memory since we
construct it on the fly. This happens if glibc has been compiled
with _FORTIFY_SOURCE=2, which seems to be the case on some
distros/systems). On the upside, we now use the sprintf code path
on all systems which should be better from a maintenance point
of view.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697970
Make GST_PLUGIN_DEFINE use G_STRINGIFY() to convert the name argument
into a meaningful string. The advantage of this is that `name' can be
expanded from other macros defined in the plug-in element.
Signed-off-by: Gwenole Beauchesne <gwenole.beauchesne@intel.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697872
Don't use just GLIB_HAVE_ALLOCA_H to check if alloca is available,
that's just for the header. GLib may define alloca for us otherwise
too irrespective of GLIB_HAVE_ALLOCA_H.
Fixes compiler warning with mingw32:
gst/printf/vasnprintf.c:73:0: warning: "alloca" redefined
Does not do anything yet. On a sidenote, we can't just use
%p\001 or so to signal the extension because g-i complains
about an invalid ascii character then, so have to resort to
something more elaborate, such as %p\aA etc.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=613081
and remove all the printf extension/specifier stuff for
the system printf. Next we need to add back the custom
specifiers to our own printf implementation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=613081
We will add support for our own printf modifiers, so we can
get nice debug log output on all operating systems irrespective
of the specific libc version used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=613081
Iterate over the fields of the superset instead of those of the subset.
This way we can check the presence of the subset field and do the subset check
in one iteration.
Very often, when the end of a segment is detected by demuxer, the position
is slightly outside the segment boundaries. Currently, if that is the case
the base will be set to NONE instead of normal accumulation. This would
break non-flushing seeks in oggdemux and most likely other demuxers.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=696899
This is equal to any other caps features but results in unfixed caps. It
would be used by elements that only look at the buffer metadata or are
currently working in passthrough mode, and as such don't care about any
specific features.
These are meant to specify features in caps that are required
for a specific structure, for example a specific memory type
or meta.
Semantically they could be though of as an extension of the media
type name of the structures and are handled exactly like that.
Elements should override GstElement::set_context() and also call
gst_element_set_context() to keep this context up-to-date with
the very latest context they internally use.
When flushing, it is expected that upstream will send a SEGMENT
event afterwards.
This also avoids stray SEGMENT events from coming through after a
flush.
Unref the allocator *after* we have freed the memory. We also need to keep
a ref to the allocator around because following the now freed memory would
lead to crashes.
This reverts commit 1a1a9e143f.
This breaks the pipelines/tagschecking unit test for some reason
(fakesrc ! capsfilter ! qtmux linking fails now). It might be
a bug in the unit test of course, but someone will need to
investigate this. Reverting for now.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692508
Only use the allocator of the copied memory when we can use the default
_alloc function on it. Otherwise we will have to use the default
allocator for the copy.
motivation comes from: /* FIXME: why not gst_pad_get_pad_template (pad); */
this code path is quite nicer, we now only revert to creating the template
if gst_pad_get_pad_template fails.
with this fork, we gain a non-allocation of GstCaps *templcaps
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=692508
Set operations on the bitmasks don't make much sense and result
in invalid caps when used as a channel-mask. They are now handled
exactly like integers.
This functionality was not used anywhere except for tests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691370
gst_bin_query() now forwards the query to the source pads as well if
none of the sinks of the bin satisfied the query. This helps in the
case of DURATION queries done a bin containing a source element.
Fixes bug 638749
Under certain GST_STATE_CHANGED_PAUSED_TO_PLAYING transitions, a pipeline with
a NULL clock will fail an assertion due to an unchecked call to gst_object_ref().
This is fixed by simply adding a check and only ref-ing if the clock is not NULL.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693065
Add gstenumtypes.h/c for inclusion with g-ir-scanner. This fixes
problems where introspection based bindings think GstState is
typeless due to the GType not being included as an annotation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691185
the code ifed a debug statement, that can't be right. anyway, the way it is,
we don't really need that branch, as we set the flag to unset only if set
(and that can't fail) hence the end result is always to unset the flag.
Signed-off-by: Niv Sardi <xaiki@evilgiggle.com>
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691985
The _1_0 suffixed environment variables override the
non-suffixed ones, so if we're in an environment that
sets the _1_0 suffixed ones, such as jhbuild, we need
to set those to make sure ours actually always get
used.
Avoid unnecessary value copying, and unnecessary init/unset
cycles which all go through the value table. There's a bunch
of places where we copy a value and then unset it in the next
line, instead of just taking over the source value.
Add a GST_BIN_FLAG_NO_RESYNC that disables a resync when an element is added,
removed or linked in the bin. This is interesting for complex bins that
dynamically add elements to themselves and want to manage the state of those
elements without interference from resyncs.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690420
We don't need to link to gthread-2.0 any longer, since all
the normal thread-related stuff is in GLib proper, and we
don't use g_thread_init() any more.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=689043
The function init_pre() in gstreamer/gst/gst.c calls setlocale(LC_ALL, ""),
which sets the locale to the values specified in the environment. This is
wrong for two reasons:
1. It is absolutely not the task of a library to decide on the correct locale
for a program. Some programs change the locale for various (good or bad)
reasons, and libraries should respect that. Programs where GStreamer's
overwriting of the locale causes bugs include Emacs [1, 2], Sublime Text [3],
and Lua [4].
[1] http://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=12392
[2] http://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=779426
[3] http://www.sublimetext.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=8543
[4] https://github.com/pavouk/lgi/issues/19
Note that setting the locale can cause problems for programs that are not even
linked against GStreamer. In the case of Emacs, for example, GStreamer seems
to be initialized through GTK via libcanberra.
2. Setting the locale is not thread-safe, and therefore should not be done in a
library.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=685650
passing argument 1 of 'g_mutex_lock' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type
passing argument 1 of 'g_mutex_unlock' discards 'const' qualifier from pointer target type
It's usually not a problem if a query fails if there's no peer,
especially as it will happen during pad linking (caps query)
quite often and spams the logs.
If we try to push sticky events but a probe dropped them, we don't mark
the event as received and mark the pad as PENDING_EVENTS. This ensures
that we resend the event the next time. For this we need to let the
custom flow return from the probe trickle up to
gst_pad_push_event_unchecked() so that we can differentiate between
OK and DROPPED probe returns.
First check that we can actually register the implementation before
making a GstMetaInfo. If we can't register we would otherwise end
up with an undefined type and an invalid GstMetaInfo.
It's possible that type registration fails because another metadata
with the same implementation name was already registered.
Fixes negotiation taking a ridiculous amount of
time (multiple 10s of seconds on a core2) when
there are duplicate entries in lists.
Could have a negative performance impact on other
scenarios because we now have to iterate the
dest list to avoid duplicates, but we don't
have a lot of lists any more these days, and
they tend to be small anyway. The negatives
are hopefully countered by the positive effects
of reducing the list length early on in the
process. And in any case, it's the right thing
to do.
Based on patch by Andre Moreira Magalhaes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684981
This happened when glib was not using system printf, and caused the
internal gstreamer printf extensions to be used for all %p printfs,
causing crashes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=684970
Also add test to make sure that if a pad probe is removed while it's
callback is running, the cleanup_hook isn't called again if it
returns GST_PAD_PROBE_REMOVE
Facilitate GstBuffer -> GstSample transition for some tags,
could be hard to catch otherwise when creating tags, since
it'll only be apparent later when someone tries to read the
tags.
We usually first create the stream_id for the stream_start event and then add
the pad to the element. This means that this functions should work when there
are no pads on the element yet.
Recheck for sticky events after doing a pad block because the pad block could
have caused a relink and then we need to resend the events to the newly linked
pad.
Fixes things like switching of visualisations.
The duration should be re-queried via a query using the
normal path, we don't want applications to use the value
from the message itself, since it might no match what a
duration query done from the sink upstream might yield.
Also disables duration caching in GstBin. It should be
added back again at some point.
When making a copy of the memory allocated from the default memory allocator,
make sure the new copy has the same alignment as the original memory.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=680796
Elements such as the GstIirEqualizerNBands would so far not store the properties
of their children. Now we also grab the properties of child elements and try to
restore them.
Not so useful: just adds/reads stuff from an internal GList without
actually doing anything with those paths, so remove for now:
gst_registry_add_path
gst_registry_get_path_list
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=608841
No longer accept any old GObjects. This makes things nicer for
bindings. If a utility function that handles both nicely
is deemed worthwhile, we can still add one to gstutils.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681681
Add an alternative version of gst_pad_check_reconfigure that doesn't
clear the reconfigure flag.
Useful for increasing error resilience without duplicating the
reconfigure code in pad task functions.
API: gst_pad_needs_reconfigure
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681198
GObject Introspection does not support macros.
This is needed for bindings. We can still add back
macros or inline functions again later if we think
it's worth it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=678301
When max_buffers > 0 and the pool is empty, actually try to allocate more
buffers up to the max_buffers limit.
We need to add a counter for this to count how many buffers we allocated and
check this against the max_buffers limit.
Reorganise and clean up some code.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=681153
The order of returned pads wasn't specified before, so let's specify
it and use an order which might prove the most useful : the order in
which pads were added to the element.
If someone changes the order, make sure users of those iterators from
now on don't rely on that order !