Do not do any checks for the start/stop in the new
gst_segment_to_running_time_full() method, we can let this be done by
the more capable gst_segment_clip() method. This allows us to remove the
enum of results and only return the sign of the calculated running-time.
We need to put the old clipping checks in the old
gst_segment_to_running_time() still because they work slightly
differently than the _clip methods.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740575
Add a clip argument to gst_segment_to_running_time_full() to disable
the checks against the segment boundaries. This makes it possible to
generate an extrapolated running-time for timestamps outside of the
segment.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740575
Add a helper method to get a running-time with a little more features
such as detecting if the value was before or after the segment and
negative running-time.
API: gst_segment_to_running_time_full()
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740575
The position in the segment is relative to the start but the offset
isn't, so subtract the start from the position when setting the offset.
Add unit test for this as well.
gstbuffer.c:522:58: error: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'GstBufferFlags' to
different enumeration type 'GstBufferCopyFlags' [-Werror,-Wenum-conversion]
if (!gst_buffer_copy_into (copy, (GstBuffer *) buffer, flags, 0, -1))
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~~~~
gstbuffer.c:534:46: error: implicit conversion from enumeration type 'GstBufferCopyFlags' to
different enumeration type 'GstBufferFlags' [-Werror,-Wenum-conversion]
return gst_buffer_copy_with_flags (buffer, GST_BUFFER_COPY_ALL);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
./gstbuffer.h:433:31: note: expanded from macro 'GST_BUFFER_COPY_ALL'
...((GstBufferCopyFlags)(GST_BUFFER_COPY_METADATA | GST_BUFFER_COPY_MEMORY))
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Don't stop the pool in set_config(). Instead, let the controlling
element manage it. Most of the time, when an active pool is being
configured is because the caps didn't change.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745377
A variant of gst_buffer_copy that forces the underlying memory
to be copied.
This is added to avoid adding an extra reference to a GstMemory
that might belong to a bufferpool that is trying to be drained.
The use case is when the buffer copying is done to release the
old buffer and all its resources.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745287
Shouldn't take the lock while unreferencing messages, because that may cause
more messages to be sent, which will try to take the lock and cause the app to
hang.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728777
gst_bin_sync_children_states() will iterate over all the elements of a bin and
sync their states with the state of the bin. This is useful when adding many
elements to a bin and would otherwise have to call
gst_element_sync_state_with_parent() on each and every one of them.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745042
Instead of always shortening the __FILE__ path, even if the
log message is not actually printed, which might happen if
the log level is activated but the category is not, only
shorten the path if we're actually going to output it and
if it looks like it needs shortening. Log handlers had no
guarantee that they would get a name instead of a path
anyway on any architecture, so it shouldn't be a problem.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745213
A single unlinked pad can make the latency query fail across the
pipeline, which is probably not desirable. Instead, we return a default
anything goes value.
Perhaps we should also be emitting a gst_message_new_latency() when a
PLAYING element has one of its pads linked.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=745197
This reverts commit 1911554cff.
This breaks the functionality of GST_PAD_FLAG_NEED_PARENT, the reason for this
flag is that if a pad is removed from a running element, you don't want
functions (such as chain or event) to be called on the pad without a parent set.
This can happen if you remove a request or sometimes pad from a running element.
I don't see the code that caused this in tsdemux, but if it needs to unset
the flag on remove, it should do it itself and then make sure that the parent
exists in any pad function.
Revive message in dispose handler before we signal the bus thread,
otherwise the bus thread might be woken up and unref the message
before we had a chance to revive it yet.
Async message delivery (where the posting thread gets blocked
until the message has been processed and/or freed) was pretty
much completely broken.
For one, don't use GMutex implementation details to check
whether a mutex has been initialized or not, esp. not
implementation details that don't hold true any more with
newer GLib versions where atomic ops and futexes are used
(spotted by Josep Torras). This led to async message
delivery no longer blocking with newer GLib versions on
Linux.
Secondly, after async delivery don't free mutex/GCond
embedded inside the just-freed message structure.
Use a new (private) mini object flag to signal GstMessage
that the message being freed is part of an async delivery
on the bus so that the dispose handler can keep the message
alive and the bus can free it once it's done cleaning up
stuff.
If an element implements wrongly the URI query and set the uri to NULL and if
the element calls gst_pad_create_stream_id at some point, it will lead to crash
as the uri is not supposed to be NULL in the gst_pad_create_stream_id_internal
function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744520
Before we just took the values from the first pad that succeded the query,
now we accumulate the results of every sinkpad properly and return that
result.