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.
This re-uses existing code and makes sure we properly serialise
and deserialise datetimes where not all fields are set (thus
fixing some warnings when serialising such datetimes).
Take into account that not all fields might be valid (though they
are valid in the GDateTime structure). But we should just return
unordered if the set fields don't match. Also, don't check
microseconds when comparing datetimes, since we don't serialise
those by default if they're available. This ensures date times are
still regarded as equal after serialising+deserialising.
Now that TOCs are refcounted and have a GType, we can just
stuff a ref of the TOC directly into the various toc
event/message/query structures and get rid of lots of
cracktastic GstStructure <-> GstToc serialisation and
deserialisation code. We lose some TOC sanity checking
in the process, but that should really be done when
it's being created anyway.
Make GstPluginFeature opaque until we have time to
clean it up a little. Only GstElementFactory and
GstTypefindFactory derive from it, and they are
opaque already, and we currently don't support
custom plugin features in the registry anyway.
There's no reason anyone would want to derive from this, so
just make opaque until we manage to make all the private bits
private properly (which I'm not doing right now because it's
more invasive and I have registry modifications locally which
touch all that code as well).
Add a new simple miniobject that is a combination of a GstBuffer, GstCaps,
GstSegment and other arbitrary info organized in a GstStructure. This object can
be used to exchange samples between an element and the application or for
storing album art in tags etc.
This was a FIXME for 0.11. I guess a case could be made to keep it around
separately for apps or libraries that only want to use GStreamer's debugging
system, but it seems more likely they'd just copy the two source files into
their own tree if the case. Also, things like types wouldn't be initialised
without gst_init(). We can still make it public again if anyone needs it,
but then we should make it a proper function and not hide it behind
underscores.
Remove gst_mini_object_register() and add a GST_DEFINE_MINI_OBJECT macro to
define a _get_type() function for the boxed miniobject.
Remove a bunch of custom _get_type() functions and replace them with the
miniobject macro.
Rename some _init method to _priv_*_initialize() like the rest of them.
Inspired by patch from Johan Dahlin and see bug #657603
API: GstElement::state_changed
This is always called when the state of an element has changed and
before the corresponding state-changed message is posted on the bus.
gst_structure_get_type() -> _gst_structure_type to avoid method calls for
getting the GType that initialized at the start.
Hide some structure fields in private data so that we can change the
implementation.
Move structure equality check from caps.c to structure.c where it belongs.
Drop in old GstBus code for the release to play it safe, since
regressions that are apparently hard to track down and reproduce
have been reported (on windows/OSX mostly) against the lockfree
version, and more time is needed to fix them.
This reverts commit 03391a8970.
This reverts commit 43cdbc17e6.
This reverts commit 80eb160e0f.
This reverts commit c41b0ade28.
This reverts commit 874d60e589.
This reverts commit 79370d4b17.
This reverts commit 2cb3e52351.
This reverts commit bd1c400114.
This reverts commit 4bf8f1524f.
This reverts commit 14d7db1b52.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647493
This allows to only create the socketpair when it is really required instead
of always creating it and immediately destroying it again for child buses.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647005
This is used by GstBin to create a child bus without
a socketpair because child buses will always work
synchronous. Otherwise too many sockets could be
created and the limit of file descriptors for the
process could be reached.
Fixes bug #646624.