This can easily deadlock if the element uses the object lock for
something internally, like posting an error message. Use an GstIterator
for iterating over the pads instead.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=777449
When registering a new debug category after _debug_init(), we need to
re check the GST_DEBUG filter settings again.
In addition when parsing the filter setting, we need to already bump up
the min-debug level to not suppress debug log statments that dynamically
register a category. This happens in libraries that use a function to
register a category on first use.
A property not defined in a preset file can simply mean that the
user wants it to be set as it default value, and we should not warn
about that.
A missing preset file in a directory can happen has there are several
directory where a preset can be found in.
Saves us a custom script. Template files are nicer than passing
multiline templating stuff through to glib-mkenums. And we can
get rid of our custom python script.
It's a programming error to pass other pads here, and it easily causes
crashes or other problematic behaviour down the road as subclasses
usually assume to only get their pads.
Allows proper usage of structures in structures in caps. Subtraction
is not implemented due to complications with empty fields representing
all possible values.
The only implementation that doesn't delegate to the already existing
GstStructure functions is the union function.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775796
After b76ecfd992 introduced
GST_PAD_FLAG_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE, the performance penalty this
message is refering to (the cascading ACCEPT_CAPS query)
only applies to the cases where !GST_PAD_IS_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE
This is an API break but that API has not been released yet.
We are passing a flag rather than a simple boolean as we can imagine
to implement more features in the future for example to retrieve a
stack trace for all the threads, etc..
Retrieving source file and line numbers is pretty
expensive while getting a stack trace, this new argument
allows the user to decide to retrieve a backtrace
without those infos instead which is much faster.
For example running $ GST_LEAKS_TRACER_STACK_TRACE=1 GST_DEBUG=GST_TRACER:7 \
GST_TRACERS=leaks time gst-launch-1.0 videotestsrc num-buffers=1 ! fakesink:
* With simple stack traces:
0.04s user 0.02s system 99% cpu 0.060 total
* With full stack traces:
0.66s user 0.23s system 96% cpu 0.926 total
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775423
As an usecase of URI fragment, it can indicate temporal or spatial
dimension of a media stream. To easily parse key-value pair,
newly added gst_uri_get_media_fragment_table () API will provide
the table of key-value pair likewise URI query.
See also https://www.w3.org/TR/media-frags/https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=774830
We were creating a new session to retrive each line of a stack trace
and we are supposed to start it once for a whole stack trace.
And pass the whole file to gst-indent.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=775365
This structure is always allocated by GStreamer, can't be
subclassed or extended, and is never allocated or used on
the stack, so we don't need any padding and can extend it
as we please.
When requesting a pad from a template and it's already linked, this
means it was a static pad. Since we only want to return an *available*
pad, we must return NULL ... but we must also remove the reference
we got from getting that static pad.
The "No need to unref" message (which wasn't true for quite some time)
dates back from the very very very first commit introducing the 0.10
features.
The caller might pass arbitrary data here that caused the error, and
trying to set invalid UTF-8 in a GstStructure causes it to be not set at
all. Later when trying to parse it, the field will not exist and the
return value will point to invalid memory. Prevent this by storing NULL
instead.
Also print a g_warning(), the caller should never ever do this to begin
with.