Other pads that are waiting for the stream on the selected
pad to advance before they finish waiting themselves
should be given the chance to do so when the selected pad
goes EOS. Fixes problems where input streams can end up
waiting forever if the active stream goes EOS earlier than
their own end time.
Ensure we do not attempt to destroy the current range. Doing so
causes the current one to be left dangling, and it may be dereferenced
later, leading to a crash.
This can happen with a very small queue2 ring buffer (10000 bytes)
and 4 kB buffers.
repro case:
gst-launch-1.0 fakesrc sizetype=2 sizemax=4096 ! \
queue2 ring-buffer-max-size=1000 ! fakesink sync=true
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767688
This is an update on c9b6848885
multiqueue: Fix not-linked pad handling at EOS
While that commit did fix the behaviour if upstream sent a GST_EVENT_EOS,
it would break the same issue when *downstream* returns GST_FLOW_EOS
(which can happen for example when downstream decoders receive data
from after the segment stop).
GST_PAD_IS_EOS() is only TRUE when a GST_EVENT_EOS has flown through it
and not when a GST_EVENT_EOS has gone through it.
In order to handle both cases, also take into account the last flow
return.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763770
This patch handle the case when you have 1 pad (so the fast path is
being used) but this pad is removed. If we are in allow-not-linked, we
should return GST_FLOW_OK, otherwise, we should return GST_FLOW_UNLINKED
and ignore the meaningless return value obtained from pushing.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767413
... when flushing and deactivating pads. Otherwise downstream might have a
query that was already unreffed by upstream, causing crashes or other
interesting effects.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763496
The other signal handlers of the type-found signal might have reactivated
typefind in PULL mode already, pushing a CAPS event at that point would cause
deadlocks and is in general unexpected by elements that are in PULL mode.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765906
This ensures the following special case is handled properly:
1. Queue is empty
2. Data is pushed, fill level is below the current high-threshold
3. high-threshold is set to a level that is below the current fill level
Since mq->percent wasn't being recalculated in step #3 properly, this
caused the multiqueue to switch off its buffering state when new data is
pushed in, and never post a 100% buffering message. The application will
have received a <100% buffering message from step #2, but will never see
100%.
Fix this by recalculating the current fill level percentage during
high-threshold property changes in the same manner as it is done when
use-buffering is modified.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763757
Ensure that not-linked pads will drain out at EOS by
correctly detecting the EOS condition based on the EOS
pad flag (which indicates we actually pushed an EOS),
and make sure that not-linked pads are woken when doing
EOS processing on linked pads.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763770
If an application calls gst_pad_query_caps from its "have-type" signal handler,
then the query fails because typefind->caps has not been set yet.
This patch sets typefind->caps in the object method handler, before the signal
handlers are called.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763491
This reverts commit 0835c3d656.
It causes deadlocks in decodebin, which currently would deadlock if the caps
are already on the pad in have-type and are forwarded while copying the sticky
events (while holding the decodebin lock)... as that might cause the next
element to expose pads, which then calls back into decodebin and takes the
decodebin lock.
This needs some more thoughts.
They can fail for various reasons.
For non-fatal cases (such as the dump feature of identiy and fakesink),
we just silently skip it.
For other cases post an error message.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=728326
The use-tags-bitrate property makes queue2 look at
tag events in the stream and extract a bitrate for the
stream to use when calculating a duration for buffers
that don't have one explicitly set.
This lets queue2 sensibly buffer to a time threshold
for any bytestream for which the general bitrate is known.
segment.position is meant for internal usage only, but the various
GST_EVENT_SEGMENT creationg/parsing functions won't clear that field.
Use the appropriate segment boundary as an initial value instead