Buffer pool set_config() may return FALSE if requested configuration needed small
changes. Reget the config and try setting it again. This ensure we have a configured
pool if possible.
Currently the API is far from optimal and the user has to work around
our badly defined API to simply install missing plugins.
API:
new:
gst_discoverer_info_get_missing_elements_installer_details
deprecated:
gst_discoverer_info_get_misc
gst_discoverer_stream_info_get_misc
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=720596
They are very confusing for people, and more often than not
also just not very accurate. Seeing 'last reviewed: 2005' in
your docs is not very confidence-inspiring. Let's just remove
those comments.
We were returning in various places without unreffing the caps, and
we were also leaking (overwriting) the caps we got from _get_current_caps()
Spotted by Haakon Sporsheim in #gstreamer
This should allow for more meaningful errors. Dereferencing NULL
is more useful information than dereferencing a random address
happened to be on the stack.
If gst_video_overlay_rectangle_apply_global_alpha is called with
a rectangle with unsuitable alpha, expanding the alpha plane will
fail, and thus lead to dereferencing a NULL src pointer. It's not
certain this will happen in practice, as the function is static
and callers might ensure suitable alpha before calling, but there
is no apparent explicit such check.
Add prologue asserts for proper alpha to explicitely prevent this.
Coverity 1139707
Videodecoder does late renegotiation, it will wait for the next
buffer before renegotiating its caps and bufferpool. It might happen
that downstream element switched from passthrough to non-passthrough
and sent a reconfigure upstream (that caused this renegotiation).
This downstream element will ask the video sink below for the bufferpool
with an allocation query and will get the same bufferpool that
videodecoder is holding, too.
When renegotiating, if videodecoder deactivates its bufferpool it
might be deactivating the bufferpool that some element downstream
is using and cause the pipeline to fail.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=727498
Clock slaving can clip start time to zero, giving us a shorted
duration than we originally got. To keep in sync, we must then
discard the samples falling before that zero timestamp.
This possibly fixes random distortion caused by constant PA
underflows which are never resynced.
The KEMAC payload actually needs to have subpayloads and the key should
go into the KEY_DATA subpayload. Add support for subpayloads and
implement the KEY_DATA payload.
Add some pointers to the conversion functions that allow us to add
encryption and decryption later.
baseparse will reverse each GOP for us already, so the segment events can
be after our keyframe. Make sure to get it and all other relevant sticky
events before starting to decode.