Take into account that not all fields might be valid (though they
are valid in the GDateTime structure). But we should just return
unordered if the set fields don't match. Also, don't check
microseconds when comparing datetimes, since we don't serialise
those by default if they're available. This ensures date times are
still regarded as equal after serialising+deserialising.
Some tag parsers and writers use same datetime format based on ISO 8601.
We can reduce some code by creating some general functions for it.
API: gst_date_time_to_iso8601_string()
API: gst_date_time_new_from_iso8601_string()
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=678031
Now that TOCs are refcounted and have a GType, we can just
stuff a ref of the TOC directly into the various toc
event/message/query structures and get rid of lots of
cracktastic GstStructure <-> GstToc serialisation and
deserialisation code. We lose some TOC sanity checking
in the process, but that should really be done when
it's being created anyway.
Let's keep it simple for now:
gst_toc_setter_reset_toc() -> gst_toc_setter_reset()
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_copy() -> removed
gst_toc_setter_get_toc() -> returns a ref now
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_entry_copy() -> removed,
use TOC functions instead
gst_toc_setter_get_toc_entry() -> removed,
use TOC functions instead
gst_toc_setter_add_toc_entry() -> removed,
to avoid problems with (refcount-dependent)
writability of TOC; use TOC functions instead
So mini objects don't have to poke into the GstMiniObject part
of the structure. Saves lines of code, and seems slightly cleaner.
We don't have proper OO hierarchies or methods here after all.
These changes are to clean up syntax issues such as missing colons,
missing spaces, etc., and minor issues such as argument names in
headers not matching the implementation and/or documentation.
When 2 weak refs are added, the array is not resized big enough.
Simplify the weak ref handling code.
Free memory when we remove all weak refs.
Allow installing the same weak ref multiple times, like in gobject.
The size field is used by subclasses to store the total allocated size of the
memory for this miniobject. Because miniobject doesn't really do anything with
this field we can move it to the subclasses.
Add the running-time of the buffer that caused the async operation to complete
to the async-done message.
Update bin to handle the new async-done message.
Use the new RESET_TIME message to reset the start-time of the pipeline to the
requested time.
Make basesink request a new running-time when the flush-stop message tells it to
insteasd of waiting for preroll.
Add a new message to reset the pipeline running_time. Currently reseting the
pipeline can only be requested in the async_done message which means that the
pipeline needs to be prerolled. It is better to move this to a separate message.
Remove constructors we don't want:
gst_date_time_new_ymd_h() because we don't want to
support hour-only for now;
gst_date_time_new_ymd_hm() because we don't want to
add constructors with time info where the caller doesn't
have to think about what timezone the time is in.
Lots of compulsive clean-up. Docs fixes. Replace
has_minute() and has_hour() with has_time().
In order to deserialise and re-serialise dates and date times
from tags properly, we need to be able to express partial
dates (e.g. YYYY or YYYY-MM) and date times.
We only support partial date times where all the more
significant fields above the first unset field are set
(e.g. YYYY-00-DD is not supported).
Calling _get_foo() when foo is not set is not allowed
any more, callers need to check which fields are set
first.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677757
Make the gst_bin_remove_func more like the add_func. Check if the element we try
to remove from the bin has the bin as the parent and set the parent flag to NULL
immediately, this allows us to avoid concurrent remove operations without using
the UNPARENTING element flag. After we unparented the element from the bin, we
update the bin state and remove the element from the list. Finally we unlink
all the pads.
This avoids a race condition where the element could still claim to have the
bin as the parent while the bin didn't have a pointer to the element anymore.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=647759
In the dispose handler we first need to release all the request pads and then
remove the remaining pads. This is because it is possible that releasing the
request pad might also cleanly remove some of the other dynamic pads, like
what rtpsession does.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=677436
Context: Latency configuration should not be
messed up because of not-linked pads. In general,
one return FALSE on latency distribution causes
the "overall" pipeline latency configuration to
fail. This shows up as noise in logs (warning).
Conflicts:
gst/gstpad.c
Otherwise a pipeline where one sticky event fails to be sent will
never forward EOS events downstream. This can cause pipelines to
wait forever for EOS on errors.
The linking behaviour of external variables that are not initialized
in the compilation unit where they are defined is undefined. On OS X
this causes a linking failure when statically linking GStreamer.
When the bin does an upward state change, try to avoid doing a downward state
change on the child and vice versa.
Add some more unit tests for this fix.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=621833
Make GstPluginFeature opaque until we have time to
clean it up a little. Only GstElementFactory and
GstTypefindFactory derive from it, and they are
opaque already, and we currently don't support
custom plugin features in the registry anyway.
They can be used to select snapping behavior (to previous, next, or
nearest location, where relevant) when seeking.
The seeking implementation (eg, demuxer) may currently ignore some
or all of these flags.
It's only used internally, most other users will likely
want to use gst_registry_find_plugin() directly instead
(and if not, they can easily walk the list and doing the
strcmp themselves).
There's no reason anyone would want to derive from this, so
just make opaque until we manage to make all the private bits
private properly (which I'm not doing right now because it's
more invasive and I have registry modifications locally which
touch all that code as well).
This is an implementation detail really, and it's not
clear what anyone would do with this. It's unused as
far as I'm aware, so just remove it for now.
Rename the _get_value_array() functions to _get_g_value_array() and reintroduce
the former to operate on plain unboxed c datatypes (like in 0.10). The _g_value
variants are for bindings while the _value ones are more suited to processing
in elements.
Reset the buffer not after we acquire but before we release into the pool. This
makes sure that the pool only has buffers in a clean state and that we can set
extra metadata on buffers in the acquire method. this means that we need to
remove an argument from the method.
Add a new LOCKED flag to the metadata. Refuse removing LOCKED metadata from
a buffer.
Mark the metadata from the bufferpool LOCKED.
Add unit test for LOCKED flag