This ensures that everything is properly cleaned up before the
GstDiscoverer object is freed. Specifically, it makes sure that we've
removed the async timeout callback before freeing the object to avoid a
potential crash later on.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639755
Use LC_MESSAGES rather than LC_ALL. Save/load description as untranslated string
when using an English language locale. Strip locale information to the language,
so we don't save keys like description[fr_FR.UTF-8]=...
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=638860
Earlier versions don't honour the -L/--library-path option,
which we need. See commit 4d0ccdad in gobject-introspection git.
Should "fix" build on lucid/maverick build bots.
GtkFunction is gone, and there's no update policies for
GtkRanges any more (but the default was continuous anyway,
so no need to set it to that mode explicitly).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639215
Makes things work again properly in uninstalled setups (and
presumably in installed setups where GStreamer is installed
into a non-standard prefix). Requires fixes from core git.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639039
Need to pass libgstreamer-0.10 explicitly to linker, since we're
calling gst_init(), which in turn is needed because the encoding
target get_type() function calls gst_value_register().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=639039
Make sure to use the PKG_CONFIG_PATH set at configure time instead of
just relying on an env-var set one. This makes sure both g-ir-compiler
and g-ir-scanner use the same PKG_CONFIG_PATH for determining include
paths etc.
The unit tests are riddled with g_assert() and friends, sometimes
containing functional code like set_state() calls in them even
(looking at you, pipeline/capsfilter-renegotiation). Make sure we
don't disable assert and cast checks for the unit tests even if
this has been specified for the rest of the code base, e.g. via
--disable-glib-asserts.
This was causing keyframe_granule to be set to 0 for all streams
when seeking to the beginning of the stream, i.e., at the
beginning of playback. Fixes#619778.
Instead, use either 0 or 1, depending on bitstream version, which give
the correct result for streams which aren't cut off at start.
This allows that function to not return negative granpos.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=638276
The outgoing buffer timestamp is calculated by scaling an output buffer
count by the src pad frame rate caps. If these caps change, we need to
reset the count and work from a new base timestamp. The new output
buffer timestamp is then the count scaled by the new caps values added
onto the base timestamp.