Without this patch there are problem pre-rolling when using audio back
channel.
Without this patch a probe will be created for all streams including
the stream for audio backchannel. To pre-roll all this pads have to
receive data. Since the stream for audio backchannel is a receiver this
will never happen.
The solution is to never create any probes for streams that are for
incomming data and instead set them as blocking already from beginning.
The recent ONVIF work exposed a race condition when dealing with
multiple streams: one of the sinks may preroll before other streams
have started flushing. This led to the pipeline posting async-done
prematurely, when some streams were actually still in the middle
of performing a flushing seek. The newly-added code looks up a
sticky segment event on the first stream in order to respond to
the PLAY request with accurate Scale and Speed headers. In the
failure condition, the first stream was flushing, and thus had
no sticky segment event, leading to the PLAY request failing,
and in turn the test.
This will be used in the onvif tests in order to validate the
data transmitted over TCP: for streaming to continue after a
data message has been provided to client->send_func, the client
is responsible for marking the message as sent on the relevant
stream transport.
GStreamer plays segment from stop to start when doing reverse playback.
RTSP implies that media should be played from start of Range header to
its stop. Hence we swap start and stop times before passing them to
gst_element_seek.
Also make gst_rtsp_stream_query_stop always return value that can be
used as stop time of Range header.
Add support for the RTSP Scale and Speed headers by setting the rate in
the seek to (scale*speed). We then check the resulting segment for rate
and applied rate, and use them as values for the Speed and Scale headers
respectively.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754575
Adds a new virtual function, adjust_play_mode(), that allows
sub classes to adjust the seek done on the media. The sub class can
modify the values of the the seek flags and the rate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754575
Add new function gst_rtsp_media_seek_full_with_rate() which allows the
caller to specify the rate for the seek. Also added functions in
rtsp-stream and rtsp-media for retreiving current rate and applied rate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754575
Add functionality to limit the Content-Length.
API addition, Enhancement.
Define an appropriate request size limit and reject requests
exceeding the limit with response status 413 Request Entity Too Large
Related to !182
If not waiting for free thread pool before clean transport caches, there
can be a crash if a thread is executing in transport list loop in
function send_tcp_message.
Also add a check if priv->send_pool in on_message_sent to avoid that a
new thread is pushed during wait of free thread pool. This is possible
since when waiting for free thread pool mutex have to be unlocked.
Handle the situation when a call to gst_rtsp_media_set_state is done
when media status is preparing.
Also add unit test for this scenario.
The unit test simulate on a media level when two clients share a (live)
media.
Both clients have done SETUP and got responses. Now client 1 is doing
play and client 2 is just closing the connection.
Then without patch there are a problem when
client1 is calling gst_rtsp_media_unsuspend in handle_play_request.
And client2 is doing closing connection we can end up in a call
to gst_rtsp_media_set_state when
priv->status == GST_RTSP_MEDIA_STATUS_PREPARING and all the logic for
shut down media is jumped over .
With this patch and this scenario we wait until
priv->status == GST_RTSP_MEDIA_STATUS_PREPARED and then continue to
execute after that and now we will execute the logic for
shut down media.
This adds new functions for passing buffer lists through the different
layers without breaking API/ABI, and enables the appsink to actually
provide buffer lists.
This should already reduce CPU usage and potentially context switches a
bit by passing a whole buffer list from the appsink instead of
individual buffers. As a next step it would be necessary to
a) Add support for a vector of data for the GstRTSPMessage body
b) Add support for sending multiple messages at once to the
GstRTSPWatch and let it be handled internally
c) Adding API to GOutputStream that works like writev()
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-rtsp-server/issues/29
The close handler could trigger a crash because it invalidated the
watch_context while still leaving a source attached to it which would be
cleaned up at a later point.
The previous fix for race condition around finish_unprepare where the
function could be called twice assumed that the status wouldn't change
during execution of the function. This assumption is incorrect as the
state may change, for example if an error message arrives from the
pipeline bus.
Instead a flag keeping track on whether the finish_unprepare function
is currently executing is introduced and checked.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-rtsp-server/issues/59
In plug_src we changed the element state before adding it to
the owner container. This prevented the pipeline from intercepting
a GST_STREAM_STATUS_TYPE_CREATE message from the pad in order
to assign a custom task pool.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gst-rtsp-server/issues/53
Media is considered to be blocked when all streams that belong to
that media are blocked.
This patch solves the problem of inconsistent updates of
priv->blocked that are not synchronized with the media state.
Before the seek operation is performed on media, it's required that
its pipeline is prepared <=> the pipeline is in the PAUSED state.
At this stage, all transport parts (transport sinks) have been successfully
added to the pipeline and there is no need for blocking the streams.
The sequence number in the rtpinfo is supposed to be the first RTP
sequence number. The "seqnum" property on a payloader is supposed to be
the number from the last processed RTP packet. The sequence number for
payloaders that inherit gstrtpbasepayload will not be correct in case of
buffer lists. In order to fix the seqnum property on the payloaders
gst-rtsp-server must get the sequence number for rtpinfo elsewhere and
"seqnum-offset" from the "stats" property contains the value of the
very first RTP packet in a stream. The server will, however, try to look
at the last simple in the sink element and only use properties on the
payloader in case there no sink elements yet, and by looking at the last
sample of the sink gives the server full control of which RTP packet it
looks at. If the payloader does not have the "stats" property, "seqnum"
is still used since "seqnum-offset" is only present in as part of
"stats" and this is still an issue not solved with this patch.
Needed for gst-plugins-base!17
... by actually making it a single-include header and moving everything
related to the GstRTSPServer type to rtsp-server-object.h instead.
Otherwise there are too many circular includes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797361
When the underlying layers are running on_message_sent, this sometimes
causes the underlying layer to send more data, which will cause the
underlying layer to run callback on_message_sent again. This can go on
and on.
To break this chain, we introduce an idle source that takes care of
sending data if there are more to send when running callback
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797289
Avoids ending up with races where a timeout would still be around
*after* a client was gone. This could happen rather easily in
RTSP-over-HTTP mode on a local connection, where each RTSP message
would be sent as a different HTTP connection with the same tunnelid.
If not properly removed, that timeout would then try to free again
a client (and its contents).
By default the multicast sockets are bound to INADDR_ANY,
as it's not allowed to bind sockets to multicast addresses
in Windows. This default behaviour can be changed by setting
bind-mcast-address property on the media-factory object.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797059
Export rtsp-server library API in headers when we're building the
library itself, otherwise import the API from the headers.
This fixes linker warnings on Windows when building with MSVC.
Fix up some missing config.h includes when building the lib which
is needed to get the export api define from config.h
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=797185
If a (strange) client would reuse interleaved channel numbers in
multiple SETUP requests, we should not accept them. The channel
numbers are used for looking up stream transports in the
priv->transports hash table, and transports disappear from the table
if channel numbers are reused.
RFC 7826 (RTSP 2.0), Section 18.54, clarifies that it is OK for the
server to change the channel numbers suggested by the client.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796988