Previously seekability way always assumed until the first seek actually
failed. Now we assume that all servers are not seekable unless they provide
a Content-Length header. If a seek fails after that we continue to
assume no seekability. Fixes bug #585576.
Emit stream-status messages for the pulse thread.
Don't use our own GCond for signaling but simply use the pulse mainloop
mechanisms for synchronisation.
See #587695
Upper volume limmit was 1000. That appear unneceasrily high. It would also cause
sever distortion if accidentialy used. Now its 10 (~ +15db) which is also in
sync with volume and playbin2.
Since we map the ringbuffer to the pulseaudio internal ringbuffer, flush the
pulseaudio buffer when we are asked to clear the ringbuffer.
This avoids some leftover audio after a seek.
Query the audio format, esp. dvdemux->num_channels, before we use that
variable to allocate the initial buffer. That way we don't accidentally
push a zero-sized buffer as first audio buffer.
Hack around thread-safety issues in GObject and our racy _get_type()
functions (we could easily fix the _get_type() functions, but we still
need to hack around the GObject class races until we require a newer
GLib version, I think).
Some have been replaced by newer ones, others are demoing elements that
don't exist any longer (not in -good anyway), and others have not been
touched in many years and it seem pointless to keep them around.
Removing these files makes sure we don't have any code in our repository
that uses Gtk+ symbols which are to be removed for GNOME3, and as such
will make some script that greps for this kind of stuff give us a clean
bill of code health. Fixes#585757.
A malformed (or simply huge) PNG file can lead to integer overflow in
calculating the size of the output buffer, leading to crashes or buffer
overflows later. Fixes SA35205 security advisory.
Let's be paranoid and make sure we never pass a number that takes up
more than 36 bits to _set_total_samples_estimate(), since libFLAC
expects all the other bits to be zero, and if this is not the case
neighbouring fields in the global stream info header may get messed
up inadvertently, so that flac -d refuses to decode the stream.
See #584455.
When "Content-Type" header is "audio/L16", we need to set the caps on the
outgoing buffers so that downstream elements can have means to detect the
stream type and handle it appropriately. Tested with HTTP stream provided
by pulse-audio's http module (git master).
It was previously sending the bogus buffer which was returned from
the bufferalloc (required for reverse negotiation apparently) instead
of the pending buffer.
This allows to set the Referer header among other things by
adding a "extra-headers" property that takes a GstStructure
with field=string pairs.
Fixes bug #581806.
Store the offset and caps when allocating a buffer during seeking, and then
allocate a new buffer with buffer_alloc before we push it out. This ensures
that in all respects the first buffer decoded during seeking behaves like
all other buffers, including allowing downstream re-negotiation.
The libjpeg api says that we need to set the colorspace before we call
_set_defaults(). Indeed, if we don't do that we end up with some very freaky
non-standard quant table and huffman table indexes.
Don't pass a 0 divisor to gst_util_uint64_scale(), or it will complain
in the single image case where fps=0/1 (are we supposed to differentiate
between no fps=still image and fps=0/1=variable rate here btw?)
First we ignore request to fill the ringbuffer which are less then a segment.
The small request where causing stutter.
Then we disable flushing the stream when running against pa 0.9.12 as this
triggers an assertiong in the sound server and terminates it. It does not happen
with 0.9.10 and 0.9.14.
We can use prebuf = 0 to instruct pulse to not pause the stream on underflows.
This way we can remove the underflow callback. We however have to manually
uncork the stream now when we have no available space in the buffer or when we
are writing too far away from the current read_index.
when we switch streams, the clock will reset to 0. Make sure that the provided
clock doesn't get stuck when this happens by keeping an initial offset. We also
need to make sure that we subtract this offset in samples when writing to the
ringbuffer.
If the caps changes, the sink is reset without transitioning through
a PAUSED->PLAYING state change, resulting in a corked stream. This avoids
the problem by checking that the stream is uncorked when writing samples
to it.
When trying to write out a segment, wait until there is enough free space
for the entire segment. This helps to reduce ripple in the clock reporting,
where the app might query the playback position while only half a segment
has been written (and is therefore reported by _delay(), even though
the ring buffer has not yet been advanced)
In the event handler, gst_flac_dec_sink_event(), two functions are called on
the FLAC stream without checking if it has been initialized:
FLAC__stream_decoder_flush()
FLAC__stream_decoder_process_until_end_of_stream()
Both these FLAC__*() functions modify the internal state of the FLAC stream.
Later, when the buffers start flowing, gst_flac_dec_chain() tries to initialize
the stream. the FLAC__stream_decoder_init_stream() call will fail because the
previous calls to FLAC__*() changed the stream state so it is no longer in the
initialized state.
The flacdec API calls the write callback when performing a seek. We cannot yet
push out a buffer at that time so we must keep it and push it out later.
Flush out the upstream part of the pipeline when doing a seek.
Fixes#574275.