On OSX the cdparanoia headers include IOKit framework headers (in particular
SCSICmds_INQUIRY_Definitions.h) which define a structure that has a member
named VERSION, so we must #undef VERSION before including those for things
to compile on OSX.
Fixes#609918.
This prevents the ugly hack where the text_sink pad template
was only added for textoverlay but not for the subclasses.
Also makes this work with the core change that made
subclasses inherit the templates of their parent class.
Ogg mandates the first header packet must determine a stream's type.
However, some streams (such as VP8) do not include such a header
when muxed in other containers, and thus do not include this header
as a buffer, but only in caps. We thus use headers from caps when
available to determine a new stream's type.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647856
gcc on OSX complains about ret being used uninitialized in
this function, and it is right. Don't leak element ref
when returning early because newsegment event is not in
TIME format.
Remove the android/ top dir
Fixe the Makefile.am to be androgenized
To build gstreamer for android we are now using androgenizer which generates the
needed Android.mk files.
Androgenizer can be found here:
http://git.collabora.co.uk/?p=user/derek/androgenizer.git
Also initialize it always in TIME format. We require TIME segments
in oggmux anyway and drop newsegment events in other formats and
assume an open-ended segment starting at 0.
Theora and vorbis use running time (which is correct) for calculating
the granulepos for their ogg packets. Oggmux, however, used
timestamps to order the received buffers.
This patch makes it use the running time to compare buffer times
and also to timestamp pushed buffers.
Some bits of the code still use timestamps, but they are only
used to calculate durations, so it should be fine.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=643775
'A OVER B' compositing is explained at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha_compositing.
Previously, overlaying text on a transparent background image left the
text overlay also transparent. This pipeline shows such an example:
gst-launch videotestsrc pattern=white ! video/x-raw-yuv,format=\(fourcc\)AYUV ! alpha alpha=0.0 ! textoverlay text=Testing auto-resize=False font-desc=60px ! videomixer ! ffmpegcolorspace ! autovideosink
With this patch, text is composited "OVER" the background image and
thus is visible regardless of the alpha of the background image. The
overlay in the above pipeline works after applying this patch.
Pango is not reentrant. Use a class wide mutex to protect pange use in
gst_text_overlay_render_pangocairo(). This works reliable in contrast to the
hack in my previous commit.
Fixes Bug #412678
The speed-level property, which allows callers to trade of encoding
quality for speed in the libtheora api, has a version-dependent
maximum and default values. Instead of hardcoding the acceptable
range for the theoraenc element's presentation of this setting,
we query the library directly at class initialization time and
set the maximum and default values from that. If the query fails,
we fall back to the previous default setting.
To keep the values reported by gst-inspect (which I'm told use
the spec values from the class) with those available on an\
instantiated element, we remove to setting of enc->speed_level
from the initializer and instead pass G_PARAM_CONSTRUCT to
the property spec flags, asking g_object to set this property
when theoraenc objects are constructed.
NB in theory the maximum speed-level could depend on the actual
video caps. If later versions of libtheoraenc do this, a second
call will need to be made from theora_enc_reset to update the
property, since this function is mostly useful for realtime
adjustment of performance while the pipeline is running.
libtheora has two encoding modes, CBR, where it tries to hit a target
bitrate and VBR where it tries to achieve a target quality.
Internally if the target bitrate is set to anything other then 0 the
encoding-mode is CBR.
This means that the gstreamer element can leave the video_quality
setting alone as long as the user is tweaking the bitrate. Which has the
nice side-effect that if the user explicitely sets the bitrate to 0
(which is actually the default), the quality value doesn't get reset and
one ends up encoding VBR at quality-level 0...