Keep a list of current global tags around and push them
whenever a new stream is started. Also convert all stream
specific tags to global as they are stream specific for
the container, so they are global for the streams from
within that container.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=644395
It is quite possible that we might get PTS/DTS before the first
PCR/Offset observation.
In order to end up with valid timestamp we wait until at least one
stream was able to get a proper running-time for any PTS/DTS.
Until then, we queue up the pending buffers to push out.
Once we see a first valid timestamp, we re-evaluate the amount of
running-time elapsed (based on returned inital running-time and amount
of data/DTS queued up) for any given stream.
Taking the biggest amount of elapsed time, we set that on the packetizer
as the initial offset and recalculate all pending buffers running-time
PTS/DTS.
Note: The buffer queueing system can also be used later on for the
dvb fast start proposal (where we queue up all stream packets before
seeing PAT/PMT and then push them once we know if they belong to the
chosen program).
ATSC ac3 streams are always guaranteed to be AC3 if EAC3 descriptor
is not present
If stream registration id is 'AC-3' then it's also guaranteed to be AC3.
Finally if AC3 descriptor is present it's guaranteed to be AC3.
Only silences a warning, but still.
The new seek handling re-creates the segment time information once it
has enough information after a seek.
The problem was that we'd completely ignore the requested rate. So store
that and use it in the newly created segment.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=694369
The program_number attribute was overloaded, trying to indicate both
the currently playing program, and the program requested via the
"program-number" property. The end result was that setting the
property didn't work (see #690934).
I added a new requested_program_number field rather than reviving the
current_program_number field because it seemed this would result in
fewer changes overall and be less confusing. It breaks symmetry with
the "program-number" property, but it retains parallels with the likes
of program->program_number.
Because gst_ts_demux_reset is called after the properties have been
parsed, requested_program_number is initialised in gst_ts_demux_init.
Whether this is exactly the right place, I don't know.
Setting the program-number property does not affect which program
is actually being demuxed.
Moving the initialization of the program_number from
gst_ts_demux_reset to gst_ts_demux_init seems to fix this issue.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=690934
* Avoids handling twice the same seek (can happen with playbin and files
with subtitles)
* Set the sequence number of the segment event to the sequence number of
the seek event that generated it (-1 for the initial one).
The seeking start time is approximated from the seek offset in bytes
using the accumulated PCR observations, so on a VBR stream there might
be a big difference between the actual PCR and the estimated one after
the seek. This might result in a long wait to skip all out of segments
packets.
Instead we just recalculate the new segment to start at the first PTS
after the seek, so that playback starts immediatly.
Until now we simply ignored those streams (since we couldn't do anything
with it anyway). Now that we have the mpegts library and we offload the
section handling to the application side we can properly identify and
extract them.
By default it is disabled for tsparse and enabled for tsdemux, but there is
a property to change that.
This should open the way to properly handle all private section streams,
including:
* DSM-CC
* MHEG
* Carousel data
* Metadata streams (though I haven't seen any of those in the wild)
* ... And all other specs/protocols making use of those
Partially fixes#560631
We still have some other stream types which haven't been ported, but
we will do so once we have defined the enums in the mpegts library.
Also add some FIXMEs regarding items discovered during analysis
* Only mpeg-ts section packetization remains.
* Improve code to detect duplicated sections as early as possible
* Add FIXME for various issues that need fixing (but are not regressions)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702724
Since there is a conflict between the DCII stream type and BluRay
stream types, moved the processing of BluRay-specific stream types
to the beginning of the function. Only if a BluRay stream type
IS NOT found do we proceed to check the rest of the stream type
identifiers
Previous code was also "sort-of" handling a similar conflict between
BluRay AC3 audio and standard AC3 audio. Moved the special case BluRay
AC3 handling in the main switch statement to the new BluRay-specific
switch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697892
And if we detect a discontinuity there (like... when losing packets
or having MPEGTS over raw UDP with out-of-order packets) we just
drop the corresponding packet.
A future version could try to implement a re-ordering algorithm based
on that, similar to what rtpjitterbuffer does.
Also reset segment info and drop the segment event when demuxer is
flushed.
Restore demuxer segment with the info stored in base when demuxer is
going to push data again if needed.
Drop code to recover the segment info from base in the initial program
becauses it's superseded by the new code.
Avoids consistently failing to detect that a packet is complete, which
would then only be pushed upon the start of a next packet, which leads
to quite a delay in case of a sparse (subtitle) stream.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=666674
Data should not be flushed out of the tsdemux because a payload unit start
indicator (pusi) is seen in a adaptation only ts packet. If the package contains no
payload a pusi does not indicate a new PES packet, but PSI information, etc.
This fixes playback of several TS files which contain ts packets without
payload but with pusi set to 1.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=676168
When the PES header tells us how big the outgoing packet is, push the
packet downstream as soon as we have the specified size instead of waiting
for the beginning of the next packet.
Reduces latency and removes issues with very sparse streams (like subtitles
and subpictures).
If we *really* can't figure out the first start position, that most
likely means the data to push out doesn't have any timestamp.
Use a default value of 0 then