The problem is that:
* g_value_init will end up allocating an internal list/array
* g_value_copy *clears* the existing value by calling the free func
and then the copy function (creating it again)
To avoid that alloc/free/alloc cycle, directly call the appropriate
function
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/453>
Previously this was:
* iterating and referencing all plugin features in a GList
* *then* filtering out the ones we want
* Was doing that filtering by name (i.e. `strcmp`) instead of direct pointer
comparision
Instead, just create a private direct function to get the list of plugin
features
Uses 4 times less instructions ...
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/462>
The intersection function table is a legacy of 2005, when one could
register random intersection functions. This is no longer the case.
The only place where that table was used was:
* `gst_value_can_intersect()`, where it was already only used for identical
GType
* `gst_value_intersect()`, where the table iteration was insanely expensive
Instead this patch:
* Only stored intersection functions for *different* types (of which there are
only 4)
* Make gst_value_intersect directly call the same-type intersection functions
and only use the table if ever it doesn't match.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/454>
This was going through a few locks and doing temporarily allocations for every
single task creation.. just to get a name.
We don't need to take locks since:
* The parent exists (we have a reference to it)
* The pad exists (the task belongs to it)
* Changing names of pad/elements when activating is a big no-no
Instead use the existing direct GST_DEBUG_PAD_NAME macro
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/455>
This reverts commit cd751c2de3.
Reverts https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/406
Fixes glviewconvert negotiation in e.g.:
gltestsrc ! glviewconvert output-mode-override=side-by-side ! glstereosplit name=s s.left ! queue ! fakesink s.right ! queue ! glimagesink
Problem here is that intersecting flagsets in gst_value_intersect will
always find a value comparison function but may fail a direct type
comparison due to flagsets supporting derived types. When flagset
derived types are intersected, an intersection will therefore always
fail.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/441>
If this is not done, tools like xdot fail with "unexpected char
b'\\'". This is a regression caused by commit
74938f07c2 (multiqueue: Add stats
property).
The deserialized value coming out of g_object_get_property looks like
this,
$24 = (gchar *) 0x7f560c0046a0 "application/x-gst-multi-queue-stats, queues=(structure)< \\\"queue_0\\\\,\\\\ buffers\\\\=\\\\(uint\\\\)39\\\\,\\\\ bytes\\\\=\\\\(uint\\\\)8
120251\\\\,\\\\ time\\\\=\\\\(guint64\\\\)1460000000\\\\;\\\", \\\"queue_1\\\\,\\\\ buffers\\\\=\\\\(uint\\\\)186\\\\,\\\\ bytes\\\\=\\\\(uint\\\\)838020\\\\,\\\\ time\\\\=\
\\\(guint64\\\\)1984000002\\\\;\\\" >;"
That is immediately looking wrong. I don't know enough about GNOME
serialization details to say with confidence what happened here. It
gets worse after this is sent through g_strescape and then written to
the dot file. Interestingly, dot -Tpng is fine to ignore them it
seems.
Since the stats are by definition verbose, I decided the best choice
to omit them from the dot file, since such details are not of interest
there.
Part-of: <https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/442>
To allow the refcounting tracer to work better. In childproxy/iterator
these might be plain GObjects but gst_object_unref() also works on them.
In other places where it is never GstObject, g_object_unref() is kept.
There is not point waiting if the time to wait is less than this
platform specific value. The worst case here is GCond usage on windows
where the granularity is 1ms.
Problem:
multiple aggregator elements (audiomixer, compositor) in a live
pipeline use a lot of CPU waiting each other up. This is because
of the previously unused clock entry unscheduling during regular
operation.
Clock entry unscheduling has the potential to wake up every clock entry
waiting using the system clock which may be a large number.
Solution:
Implement waiting per entry and only wakeup the unscheduled entry.
While this may be possible using GCond, theoretically GCond only gives
us microsecond accuracy and uses relative waits in a number of places.
We can unfortunately do better poking at the platform specifics
ourselves by using futexes on linux and pthread on other unix. Windows
may have a possible implementation using Waitable timers but that is
not implemented here and instead falls back to the GCond implementation.
GCond waits on Windows is still as accurate as the previous GstPoll-based
implementation.
When a live pipeline goes to PLAYING, its change_state method
is called twice for PAUSED_TO_PLAYING: the first time is
from GstElement, when NO_PREROLL is returned, the second
is from GstBin, after all async_done messages have been
collected.
base_time selection is done only the first time, through
comparisons with start_time.
On the other hand, when this live pipeline gets flush seeked,
even though start_time is reset by the sink upon reception
of flush_stop(reset_time=TRUE), PAUSED_TO_PLAYING only occurs
once, from GstBin, after all async_done messages have been
collected. This causes the base_time to be off by <latency>.
This commit addresses this by mimicing the behaviour of
GstElement on NO_PREROLL, and calling the change_state
method manually when the following conditions are met:
* The pipeline is live
* The target state is PLAYING
This new API allow resuming a task if it was paused, while leaving it to
stopped stated if it was stopped or not started yet. This new API can be
useful for callback driver workflow, where you basically want to pause and
resume the task when buffers are notified while avoiding the race with a
gst_task_stop() coming from another thread.
The old code would leave a dangling pointer in oldstr_ptr if two threads
attempted to take the same structure into the same location at the same
time:
1. First "oldstr == newstr" check (before the loop) fails.
2. Compare-and-exchange fails, due to a second thread completing the
same gst_structure_take.
3. Second "oldstr == newstr" check (in the loop) succeeds, loop breaks.
4. "oldstr" check succeeds, old structure gets freed.
5. oldstr_ptr now contains a dangling pointer.
This shouldn't happen in code that handles ownership sanely, so check
that we don't try to do this and complain loudly.
Also simplify the function by using a do-while loop, like
gst_mini_object_take.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/-/merge_requests/413
When this `_strnlen` internal method was added, strnlen (in glibc)
was not available yet (appeared in 2.10 it was released that same
year).
If available, use the much more optimized strnlen
The type checks at the end of `gst_value_intersect` to call the flagset
intersection are relatively expensive.
If we already know that:
* There was a compare function but it didn't return GST_VALUE_EQUAL
* AND none of the registered intersect functions failed
Then we know they can't intersect and can return early.
Trims ~20% of the instruction calls
For subtracting a list from another, the previous implementation would
do a double subtraction of one from another (which would create temporary
arrays/values which would then be discarded). Instead iterate and do
the comparision directly.
For intersecting a list with another, we can directly iterate both at
once and therefore avoid doing a *full* check of all values of the list
against all other values of the list.
This tries to inline as much as possible array/list and its contents
in order to avoid double allocation/freeing. This also improves the
locality of data.
The internal value is still API/ABI compatible with the *public*
GArray structure. This allows READ-ONLY backwards compatibility with
any external users that assume that the content of a list/array value
is backed by a GArray.
In case the buffer is not writable, the parent (the BufferList) is not
removed before calling func. So if it is changed, the parent (the BufferList)
of the previous buffer should be removed after calling func.
For all the structure creation using valist/varargs we calculate
the number of fields we will need to store. This ensures all callers
will end up with a single allocation.
Instead of having 3 allocations:
* One for GstStructure
* One for GArray
* One for the array *within* GArray
We try to limit this to a single allocation, inlining everything. This
reduces the number of micro-allocations and improves locality of data
access.
Before that commit `{test, }` wouldn't be accepted as an array
because of the trailing coma, the commit fixes that.
At the same time, the code has been refactored to avoid special casing
the first element of the list, making `{,}` or `<,>` valid lists.
We kept the start time around and subtracted it everywhere for "easy of
debugging", but we don't do anything like this anywhere else and it
only complicates the code unnecessarily.
fixate() will return empty caps if it gets empty caps passed and assert
early if any caps are provided as there's no meaningful way of fixating
any caps.
truncate() and simplify() will return the input caps in case of
any/empty caps as before, but slightly optimized and as documented
behaviour.
Also add tests for this and a few other operations behaviour on
empty/any caps.
Seems unnecessary to print the parent name for every
element in the pipeline graph, it's clear from the
graph what the parent element is and it's hard to
imagine a case where this is useful info rather than
just distracting spam. So far this was only done for
pads, but we should just do it for everything.
Previously we would use the object lock only for storing the sync
handler and its user_data in a local variable, then unlock it and only
then call the sync handler. Between unlocking and calling the sync
handler it might be unset and the user_data be freed, causing it to be
called with a freed pointer.
To prevent this add a refcounting wrapper struct around the sync
handler, hold the object lock while retrieving it and increasing the
reference count and only actually free it once the reference count
reaches zero.
As a side-effect we can now also allow to actually replace the sync
handler. Previously it was only allowed to clear it after initially
setting it according to the docs, but the code still allowed to clear it
and then set a different one.
Fixes https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer/issues/506
Keep the ANY caps empty internally when appending and merging
caps/structures. Previously, an ANY caps could end up containing
internal structures, which could be fetched by the user, and gave the
caps a non-zero length.
Also, made sure that `gst_caps_set_features_simple` frees the features
if caps is empty.
Fixed gst_caps_is_strictly_equal() to take into account whether either of
the caps are ANY caps. Previously, two ANY caps could be considered not
strictly equal if one of them still contained some remnant *internal*
structure (this can happen if an ANY caps has emerged from an append or
merge operation). Also, an ANY caps with no remnant internal structures
was considered strictly equal to an EMPTY caps. Similarly, a non-ANY caps
was considered strictly equal to an ANY caps if its remnant internal
structures happened to match.
Also changed gst_caps_is_fixed to take into account that an ANY caps
should not be considered fixed even if it contains a single remnant
internal fixed structure. This affects gst_caps_is_equal(), which uses a
separate method if both caps are fixed. Previously, this meant that a
non-ANY fixed caps was considered equal to an ANY caps if it contained a
single matching remnant internal structure.
Added some tests for these two equality methods, which covers the above
examples, as well as asserts existing behaviour.
Fixes#496
GST_CLOCK_TYPE_TAI is GStreamer abstraction for CLOCK_TAI. Main
motivation for this patch is support for transmission offloading features
- when network packets are timestamped with the time they are deemed to
be actually transmitted. Linux API for that requires that time to be
in CLOCK_TAI coordinate.
With GST_CLOCK_TYPE_TAI, applications can use CLOCK_TAI directly on
their pipelines, avoiding the need to cross timestamp packet times. By
leveraging system's CLOCK_TAI, applications also don't need to keep track
of leap seconds - less burden for them. Just keep system's CLOCK_TAI
accurate and use it.
This would cause us to set GST_GROUP_ID_INVALID as group-id in the
aggregated STREAM_START message if there are no sinks at all or none of
them have a STREAM_START message, which is simply wrong.
If we have not a single STREAM_START message then the bin should not be
considered STREAM_START.
They are optional on STREAM_START messages/events but if available
should have at least a valid value.
For STREAM_GROUP_DONE events don't allow creating it with an invalid
group id as this does not make any sense.
Introducing "GST_PLUGIN_FEATURE_RANK" environment variable in order for users
to adjust rank of plugin(s) via environment.
A "feature" and "rank" key-value pair should be separable by ":",
and each key-value pair is recognized per "," delimiters. The rank
can be a numerical value or one of pre-defined rank values
such as "NONE", "MARGINAL", "SECONDARY", and "PRIMARY" in case-insensitive manner.
In addition to pre-defined { NONE, MARGINAL, SECONDARY, PRIMARY },
"MAX" can be passed to key value used to ensure having a higher rank
than other plugin features.
Example)
- GST_PLUGIN_FEATURE_RANK=qtdemux:256,h264parse:NONE
Set rank of qtdemux plugin to 256 (primary) and 0 (none) for h264parse.
If you're using a custom log handler, you had to reverse-engineer the
debug log format and create your own format function. Now, you can
call `gst_debug_log_get_line()` and it will return a string (without
ANSI escape color codes) representation instead.
This is useful in situations when you need to log the ordinary
gst_debug log to a resource that can't be opened as a `FILE` handle.
Also includes a test.
A common use case of a dynamically built pipeline is that you want to
(conditionally) find a certain element, e.g. the `rtpbin`s in a
`uridecodebin`. If that element has a fixed name inside its parent bin
(and only has a single instance) this can be easily done by
`gst_bin_get_by_name()`.
If there are multiple instances of the element however, you can only use
`gst_bin_iterate_all_by_interface()`, but this doesn't work if you don't
have the specific `GType` (which is often the case, due to plugins being
dynamically loaded). As such, another fallback could be to use the
well-known name of the element's factory (in case of our example, this
is of course `"rtpbin"`).
According to [1] EINTR is a possible errno for fsync(),
so handle it as all other EINTR (do/while(errno == EINTR)).
Signed-off-by: Peter Seiderer <ps.report@gmx.net>
According to [1] EINTR is a possible errno for fsync(),
so handle it as all other EINTR (do/while(errno == EINTR)).
Signed-off-by: Peter Seiderer <ps.report@gmx.net>
Without this it is possible that we have a GSource with reference count
0 stored in the GstBus that is currently in the process of being
destroyed. gst_bus_remove_watch() might then access it, increase its
reference count to 1 again, call GSource API on it and then unref it,
which will then finalize it a second time.
The dispose function allows the GSource to be resurrected until it
returned so the above would be safe now.
This caused some spurious crashes during shutdown in various
applications.
It fixes below gir warnings.
../subprojects/gstreamer/gst/gstevent.c:2246: Warning: Gst:
gst_event_new_instant_rate_sync_time: unknown parameter
'rate_multiplier' in documentation comment, should be 'rate'
../subprojects/gstreamer/gst/gstevent.c:2296: Warning: Gst:
gst_event_parse_instant_rate_sync_time: unknown parameter
'rate_multiplier' in documentation comment, should be 'rate'
After release bison 2.5 the declaration %pure-parser was deprecated
in favor of %define api.pure
Nonetheless, until bison 3.4, the declaration was treated as backward
compatibility, but now bison shows a warning:
warning: deprecated directive, use ‘%define api.pure’
The patch's approach is to handle both directives according with the
used bison's version, by string replacement at source configuration
stage.
When playing gapless there were situations when some sticky events
like tags were stuck at some pad and then revived much later.
Therefore it is better to clear them upon stream-start.
Fixes#360
A seek with that flag set must be non-flushing, not change the playback
direction and start/stop position. A seek handler will then send the new
GST_EVENT_INSTANT_RATE_CHANGE event downstream for downstream elements
to immediately apply the new playback rate before the new in-band segment
event arrives.
The argument must be at least a GObject according to the GstLogFunction
definition, and while the default C log function handles miniobjects
just fine this is crashing bindings and user-supplied log functions that
(rightfully) don't expect anything but GObjects.
Not posting DEVICE_ADDED messages while a device provider is being
started makes things awkward for applications, as they have to call
get_devices() after starting the monitor.
This requires redundant code on the application side, and as far as
I understand also could cause race conditions, when a device gets
added between the calls to gst_device_monitor_start() and
gst_device_monitor_get_devices(), causing the application to "see"
the same device twice.
By passing NULL to `g_signal_new` instead of a marshaller, GLib will
actually internally optimize the signal (if the marshaller is available
in GLib itself) by also setting the valist marshaller. This makes the
signal emission a bit more performant than the regular marshalling,
which still needs to box into `GValue` and call libffi in case of a
generic marshaller.
Note that for custom marshallers, one would use
`g_signal_set_va_marshaller()` with the valist marshaller instead.
gst_pad_iterate_internal_links is usually used to find a single internal
link that a pad has, e.g. to find the corresponding pad of a multiqueue.
Added a helper function that will return either a single internal link,
if there's no other, or NULL.
In cases with many long-lived buffers that have qdata only very
briefly, the memory overhead of keeping an array of 16 GstQData
structs for each buffer can be significant. We free the array when
the last qdata is removed, like it was done in 1.14.
Fixes#436
This patch simply add a null check around a case where a child may have
been unparented concurrently to the deep_add_remove operation. This was
found by accident in the form of an "IS_GST_OBJECT" assertion, but had
no other known side effect in that test.
`g_object_notify()` actually takes a global lock to look up the
`GParamSpec` that corresponds to the given property name. It's not a
huge performance hit, but it's easily avoidable by using the
`_by_pspec()` variant.
On Windows, concurrent colored gstreamr debug output and usual
stdout/stderr string will cause broken output on terminal.
Since it's OS specific behavior, that's hard to completely avoid it
but we can protect it at least among our printing interfaces side.