This first checks what is required for ISO C99 support and sets the relevant
compiler parameters and if no C99 compiler is found, it checks for a
C89 compiler. This enables us to check for and use C89/C99 functions
that gcc hides from us without the correct compiler parameters.
Implements a color lookup table filter with 4 presets:
- heat: fake heat camera effect
- sepia: sepia toning
- xray: invert + shade to blue
- xpro: cross process
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=625817
Adds the new 'gaudieffects' plugin, originally found
here: http://github.com/luisbg/gaudi_effects
Contains the following video effect elements: burn, chromium, dilate,
dodge, exclusion and solarize.
Thanks to Jan Schmidt for the reviewing and refactoring
We really don't want this in gst-plugins-bad because of
legal complexities around RTMP and possible problems
for distributions.
Add README that explains how to build librtmp to be suitable
for linking to the GStreamer plugin.
Adds a new plugin that has elements that perform geometric
transformations to images. By geometric transformations I mean
that the operations are functions that given the output pixel
position, get the pixel position in the input image. This pixel
is then copied from input to output.
The gstgeometrictransform baseclass makes it easy to write
such elements. It boils down to write the mapping function
and exposing properties
Already added the first of the elements, 'pinch'. It's a common
effect in image editors, like gimp (distort -> pinch)
These two elements (shmsink and shmsrc) communicate buffers using POSIX
shared memory. They also communicate the caps. The source currently acts as
a live source and ignores the timestamps coming from the sink. It also does
not transfer the tags.
Move figures into docs/plugins as well, to avoid issues with
make dist and make distcheck (make distdir will not first descend
into child directories). Out-of-source build seems to still work
as well.
Move include directives for gst-libs into GST_PLUGINS_BAD_CFLAGS,
and fix all the Makefiles that use it. This is so that all the
include directories are added in the proper order: first the
directories in srcdir/builddir, then gst-plugins-base dirs, then
gstreamer dirs. If the order is wrong, installed headers may be
used instead of local headers and/or uninstalled headers from -base.
Commit message copied from core's commit from Benjamin Otte:
246f5dba96
Apparently gcc warns that GstMiniObject is not castable to
GstEvent/Message/Buffer due to them containing 64bit variables, even
though ARM hackers claim that those only need 4byte alignment. And as
long as gcc behaves that way, this warning is not very useful.
So we'll remove the warning until this problem is fixed.
Fixes#615698
Add a script that creates elements based on any of the GStreamer
base classes. It isn't very user friendly at the moment, one
needs to edit the script to make it work properly. Each base class
has a template file describing what to put into the constructed
element. Eventually, these templates should be moved to reside
with the base class source and installed to a well-known directory,
where an installed script could find them.
The template files use the .c ending so editors know they are C
source, but gst-indent doesn't handle them correctly. So they
need to be committed with -n. Ugh. I'll try to figure out a fix
for that soon.