Only create subtables when needed. It was previously creating one every
single time ... to check if one was present.
And speed up code to detect whether a subtable was already present or not.
Overall makes section pushing 2 times faster.
In some cases (NIT on highly-populated DVB-C operator for example), there
will be more than one section emitted for the same subtable and version
number.
In order not to lose those updates for the same version number, we checked
against the CRC of the previous section we parsed.
The problem is that, while it made sure we didn't lose any information, it
also meant that if the same section came back (same version, same CRC) later
on we would re-process it, re-parse it and re-emit it.
This version improves on that by keeping a list of previously observed CRC
for identical PID/subtable/version-number and will only process sections if
they really were never seen in the past (as opposed to just before).
On a 30s clip, this brings down the number of NIT section parsing from 4541
down to 663.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=614479
First send stream-start, then caps, then segment.
The segment we push is from upstream in push-mode. If we work in pull-mode
then we initialize the base segment to BYTES.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=702422
Sync byte scan is incorrect for M2TS streams because the timestamp 4
bytes were not included in the flush size. This can result in an
infinite loop.
Rework the scan code to be clearer and work in all cases.
descriptors are stored as a GValueArray of GString. The downside is
that there is no way to "pass" ownership of a GValue to a GValueArray
which previously resulted in expensive copy/free of the (already expensive)
GString.
Here we estimate first the size of the GValueArray, then create it,
then directly use the GValue of that array.
Speeds up total SI parsing by ~30%
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.
Ensure the chain is not running before reset the state to avoid race
conditions and random corruptions downstream.
Also fixes segfaults in the packetizer due wrong available values that
causes gst_adapter_map to return a NULL pointer.
This reverts commit e14e310f71.
Would be better move the packetizer flushing to FLUSH_STOP and avoid
the race that way. Without introducing a memory barrier that could
have impact in the performance.
When dealing with non-time based push-mode streams, we need to revert
to using the offset-based PCR/PTS estimation logic of packetizer.
This solves uses cases such as:
pushfile:// ! tsdemux
src ! queue ! tsdemux
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=687178
additional_copy_info: need to get rid of the highest
bit, not the lowest one
program_packet_sequence_counter: also need to get rid
of the highest bit instead of multiplying with a random
value
original_stuff_length: want to AND 0x3f to extract the
lowest 6 bits, not multiply by it.
None of these fields are actually used though, so these
should not have caused any issues.
This can be used to notify subclasses no more data is expected this
round.
tsparse will use it to push whole buffers (without copy) on the main
source pad.
It could also be used later to decide whether to push pending data
in order to reduce latency.
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
Original code to parse satellite delivery descriptors to generate
"satellite" structures appeared to be copy & pasted from cable's code
without amending for satellite.
Also added 8PSK to dvbsrc's enum for modulation.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=654485
Conflicts:
gst/mpegdemux/gstmpegdesc.h
gst/mpegdemux/mpegtspacketizer.c
tspad always has a static source pad which output everything received
(not functional yet).
Program pads are now request pads.
Remove all cruft that should have been removed from the switch over
to mpegtsbase.
Conflicts:
gst/mpegtsdemux/mpegtsparse.c
Peek as much as possible in one go. Ideally we should remove usage of
adapter altogether, but for the time being it provides a big enough
speedup (around 2 times faster per packet processed).
According to the specifications a PTS_DTS_flags value of 0x01 is forbidden.
... but there are some rare files out there that do that.
Instead of erroring out, let's warn, carry on parsing accordingly.
If the packet is really corrupted there are enough checks afterward to
detect that.
The overhead of creating/using 188 byte GstBuffer from GstAdapter
is too expensive.
We now peek the next packet, and provide a data/size which is only
valid until the packetizerpacket is cleared.
In addition, cleanup all the internal code to deal with that new
behaviour and remove double-checks which are no longer needed.
The section_length is now the corrected section_length (i.e. with
the additional 3 bytes).
Avoid using gst_adapter_prev_timestamp and instead track
the timestamp ourself.
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
Allows PCR<=>PTS<=>offset estimation/calculation
Right now the calculation is very naive, but can be extended later on
without disrupting the code in tsdemux/mpegtsbase
* Don't take into account packets that arrived at the same time as
previous ones for clock skew estimation
* Add convenience method for processing the next ts packet