it's perfectly ok for a video output device to not have overlay capabilities.
this patch removes the need to get/set the overlay parameters if the user
does not explicitely request one of the overlay properties
Both history_count and fields_required count from 1. As per the while loop
condition that follows this code, to perform the deinterlacing method, we need
history_count >= fields_required fields in the history. Therefore if we have
history_count < fields_required (not fields_required + 1), we need more fields.
This fixes the assumption that DecoderSpecificInfo must be 2 bytes long
for AAC files. The specification allows HE-AAC to be explicitly
signalled in a backward compatible way. This is done by means of an
additional information after the regular AAC header. It is expected that
decoders that can play AAC but not HE-AAC will parse the header normally
and ignore extended bits, much as they do for the HE-AAC specific payload
in the actual stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=612313
Implement a latency query and report how much latency we will add to the
stream.
Alse make some defaults for the default width/height/framerate
Fixes#631303
This uses gstpbutils to extract the profile and level from the video
object sequence and adds this to stream caps. This can be used as
metadata and for fine-grained decoder selection.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=616521
This exports the AAC profile and level in caps for use as metadata and
(eventually) for more fine-grained selection of decoders at
caps-negotiation time. (Doesn't work for HE-AAC yet though.)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=612313
Using _foreach_remove on the hashtable, while releasing the lock protecting
that table inside the callback is not a good idea. The hashtable might
then change (a source removed or added) while signals like on_timeout
are being sent.
This solution makes a copy of the table, performs the _foreach without
actually removing any sources, but marks them for removal on a second
iteration with the real list, but this time not letting go of the lock.
Fixes#630452
Holding internal locks while potentially calling out is a source
of deadlocks, and in this case the application might subscribe to the
pad-added signal.
Fixes#630449
If the source has been inactive for some time, we assume that it has
simply changed its transport source address. Hence, there is no true
third-party collision - only a simulated one.
Fixes#630447