Doesn't actually change the default value, just makes use of the
define there is. Superficial testing with fakesink and jpegdec did
not reveal improved performance for bigger block sizes, so leave
default as it is.
A flush from the upstream element should not make buffering go to 0, the next
pull request might be inside a range that we have and then we don't need to
buffer at all. If the next pull is outside anything we have, buffering will
happen as usual anyway.
We want to forward the flush events received on the sinkpad whenever the srcpad
is activated in pushmode, which can also happen when using the RINGBUFFER or
DOWNLOAD mode and downstream failed to activate us in pull mode.
When we have EOS, read the remaining bytes in the buffer and make sure we don't
wait for more data. Also clip the output buffer to the amount of remaining
bytes.
When using the ringbuffer mode, the buffer is filled when we reached the
max_level.bytes mark or the total size of the ringbuffer, whichever is smaller.
Use a threshold variable to hold the maximum distance from the current position
for with we will wait instead of doing a seek.
When using the ringbuffer and the requested offset is not available, avoid
waiting until the complete ringbuffer is filled but instead do a seek when the
requested data is further than the threshold.
Avoid doing the seek twice in the ringbuffer case.
Use the same threshold for ringbuffer and download buffering.
gst-launch.c: In function ‘print_toc_entry’:
gst-launch.c:446:3: error: the size of array ‘spc’ can’t be evaluated [-Werror=vla]
gst-launch.c:446:3: error: variable-sized object may not be initialized
This avoids ending up with plenty of pending data (since we'll only
try to parse/push one frame from the incoming buffer).
Fixes increasing memory consumption when parsers aren't linked
We reset all the waiting streams, let them push another buffer to
see if they're now active again. This allows faster switching
between streams and prevents deadlocks if downstream does any
waiting too.
Also improve locking a bit, srcresult must be protected by the
multiqueue lock too because it's used/set from random threads.
Otherwise we might block forever because upstream (e.g. multiqueue) is waiting
for the previously active stream to return forever (which is waiting here
in inputselector) before pushing something on the newly selected stream.
Might fix issues with missing symbols for people who install GStreamer
from source and at some point jumped back and forth between git master
and the 0.10.36 release (or 0.10. branch).
Should reproduce 'GStreamer-WARNING **: wrong STREAM_LOCK count 0'
warnings (with make pipelines/seek.torture or pipelines/seek.forever
anyway, since it appears to be racy).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=670846
Previously only the last would be pushed, which would cause
invalid running times downstream. This also fixes the handling
of update newsegment events.
The segment start adjustment code in pull mode should never trigger
anymore because the bisection code earlier would have already made
sure that we're at the desired position.
Also move the gap handling some lines below after sending the currently
configured segments. Otherwise we might fill gaps in a segment that is
not configured downstream yet.
Account for rounding errors in some places, and that two nows are
not always entirely identical, so allow some leeway when comparing
microseconds and seconds. Ran into this too often, esp. when the
system is under load.