Tags are pushed to "videosrcpad"/"audiosrcpad" in
gst_dvdemux_add_pad() method, however they will be NULL
in this method, hence tags are not pushed.
Instead, send tag event to "pad" created gst_dvdemux_add_pad().
Signal no-more-pads when both pads are created
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=743657
Since the move from CVS the property name of the documentation example
has been filename instead of location. Users trying the gst-launch
command as is will get:
no property name "filename" in element
Fixing it.
If a non-reference stream is behind the reference stream by an amount of
time smaller than the alignment threshold (in nsec), it counts as being
after it.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782563
Timecode trak is only supported for mov right now, not for mp4. That
code would otherwise create an invalid trak if the muxed video contained
timecode metadata.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=782684
We only accept new caps if they are basically the same. We don't want to
reset anything as if the caps are new, otherwise various state could get
out of sync with the current run.
We have some padding added after the initial moov, so a bigger updated
moov can be handled to some degree and is expected. Previously we just
ignored the padding and errored out in cases when the padding would've
just been enough.
souphttpsrc now shares its SoupSession with other elements in the
pipeline via GstContext if possible (session-wide settings are all the
defaults), or if the context was forced by the application.
This allows multiple souphttpsrcs to reuse connections, cookies, etc.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780140
This sets up a moov with the correct sample positions beforehand and
only works with constant framerate, I-frame only streams.
Currently only support for ProRes and raw audio is implemented but
adding new codecs is just a matter of defining appropriate maximum frame
sizes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781447
When muxing raw audio, we have no way of storing timestamps but are just
storing a continuous stream of audio samples. If the difference between
the expected and the real timestamp becomes to big, we should error out
instead of silently creating files with wrong A/V sync.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=780679
We were unnecessarily looping/goto-ing repeatedly when we had exactly
the amount of data as the free space, and also when the free space was
too small. This, as it turns out, is a very common scenario with
Directsound on Windows.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=773681
We have to do polling here because the event notification API that
Directsound exposes cannot be used with live playback since all events
must be registered in advance with the capture buffer, you cannot
add/remove them once playback has begun. Directsoundsrc had the same
problem.
See also: https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781249
Re-arrange order of index entry struct members to avoid padding
bytes in the middle of the struct, thus potentially reducing the
overall size of the struct and reducing memory used by the index.
On Linux x86_64 the size goes down from 32 bytes to 24 bytes for
each index entry.
If no clock was provided directly by rtspsrc. This behaviour was removed
by f8013487c9 and results in rtspsrc not
providing the system clock via the rtpjitterbuffer.
As a result, if another element like an audio sink, provides a clock,
the pipeline would select that (when going to PAUSED/PLAYING again later).
Audio clocks usually don't progress in PAUSED, and thus our live source
won't be able to use the clock to produce data, making the sink never
preroll and everything is stuck.
... unless the muxer uses the same audio pad template name as
splitmuxsink. We can't request a pad called "audio_0" on a muxer that
wants pads to be "sink_%d".
In push mode we process as much as possible in the adapter. When we receive
a DISCONT buffer which we can't match to an actual sample (based on the existing
sample table) and there is still data remaining in the incoming adapter,there is
one of two cases happening:
1) We are doing reverse playback, in which case we should flush out all pending
data
2) We have leftover data from the previous incoming buffer... which we can't do
anything about.
For the second case, make sure we flush out the remaining data so that we can start
parsing again from scratch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=781319