* use g_list_free_full(), don't iterate elements maually when freeing
* call gst_rtp_*_pay_clear_packet(), don't duplicate its code
* use gst_buffer_unref() to clarify that it is buffers being released,
instead of refering directly to gst_mini_object_unref()
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755277
It's normal when dropping into the middle of a stream to
not always have the config available immediately, so skip LOAS
until a valid config is seen without either setting invalid
caps or erroring out.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751386
flac contains the sample offset in the frame header, so after a seek
without index flacparse will know the exact position we landed on and
timestamp buffers accordingly. It only set the pts though, which means
the baseparse-set dts which was set to the seek position prevails, and
since the seek was based on an estimate, there's likely a discrepancy
between where we wanted to land and where we did land, so from here on
that dts/pts difference will be maintained, with dts possibly multiple
seconds ahead of pts, which is just wrong. The easiest way to fix this
is to just set both pts and dts based on the sample offset, but perhaps
parsed audio should just not have dts set at all.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752106
One-line removal of tags_written++
This should fix rtmp output to crtmpserver, and hopefully
noone is expecting that the element count includes the end
element, as different bits of documentation say different
things about whether it should or not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=661624
Apparently the Microsoft Azure RTMP server requires that the
videodatarate and audiodatarate metadata be provided, so
set those, even if it's to 0. Use the actual input bitrate
tags if available.
In parse_keymgmt(), don't mutate the input string that's been passed
as const, especially since we might need the original value again if
the same key info applies to multiple streams (RTX, for example).
When a resource is 404, and we have auth info - retry with the auth
info the same as if we had receive unauthorised, in case the resource
isn't even visible until credentials are supplied.
Fix a memory leak handling Mikey data.
When generating a random keystring, don't overrun the 30 byte
buffer by generating 32 bytes into it.
In gst_smpte_collected(), check upfront if input formats are same
or not. This avoids allocation of in1 and in2 buffers and
subsequent memory leak when input formats do not match.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754153
When we haven't started yet, set the start_index when we set the index property,
so that we start at the right index position after the initial seek. The index
property was never really meant to be for writing, but it used to work, so let's
support it for backwards compatibility.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739472
Commit 7d7e54ce68 added support for
DASH common encryption, however commit
bb336840c0 that went onto master
shortly before the CENC commit caused the calculation of the CENC
aux info offset to be incorrect.
The base_offset was being added if present, but if the base_offset
is relative to the start of the moof, the offset was being added twice.
The correct approach is to calculate the offset from the start of the
moof and use that offset when parsing the CENC aux info.
Sometimes it is useful to know this information on the
server side. Other popular implementations (vlc, ffmpeg, ...)
also send this header on every message.
This includes a new "user-agent" property that the user
can set to use a custom User-Agent string. The default
is "GStreamer/<version>"
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750101
Use constantDuration to calculate the timestamp of non-first AU in the
RTP packet.
If constantDuration is not present in the MIME parameters, its value
must be calculated based on the timing information from two consecutive
RTP packets with AU-Index equal to 0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747881
The payloader didn't copy anything so far, the depayloader copied every
possible meta. Let's make it consistent and just copy all metas without
tags or with only the video tag.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751774
This commit adds support for ISOBMFF Common Encryption (cenc), as
defined in ISO/IEC 23001-7. It uses a GstProtection event to
pass the contents of PSSH boxes to downstream decryptor elements
and attached GstProtectionMeta to each sample.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705991
GstRTSPMedia uses this classification to detect the real payloader
inside a dynpay bin and asserts if it doesn't find it, therefore
it is required
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753325
Initialize the PT to the default value of the codec and check if
it is still the default before declaring the pt to be dynamic or
not when setting the caps.
Also use the PT constants from the rtp lib when possible
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=747965
We need a proper caps event from upstream with the full RTP caps as we can't
create caps ourselves from thin air. Fixes usage of rtpstreamdepay after e.g.
a filesrc or any other element that supports pull mode.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753066
h264parse does the same, let's keep the behaviour consistent. As we now
include the codec_data inside the stream too here, this causes less caps
renegotiation.
The spec says:
When a picture parameter set NAL unit with a particular value of
pic_parameter_set_id is received, its content replaces the content of the
previous picture parameter set NAL unit, in decoding order, with the same
value of pic_parameter_set_id (when a previous picture parameter set NAL unit
with the same value of pic_parameter_set_id was present in the bitstream).
If the GOP is completed, pads have to start gathering for the
next one but it is possible that the the state might go to
COLLECTING_GOP_START and back to WAITING_GOP_COMPLETE before the
thread has a chance to wake up and proceed, leaving it trapped in
the check_completed_gop loop and deadlocking the other threads
waiting for it to advance.
To solve it, this patch also checks that tha input running time
hasn't changed to prevent this scenario.
h264parse does the same and this fixes decoding of some streams with 32 SPS
(or 256 PPS). It is allowed to have SPS ID 0 to 31 (or PPS ID 0 to 255), but
the field in the codec_data for the number of SPS or PPS is only 5 (or 8) bit.
As such, 32 SPS (or 256 PPS) are interpreted as 0 everywhere.
This looks like a mistake in the part of the spec about the codec_data.
In media to caps function, reserved_keys array is being used for variable i,
leading to GLib-CRITICAL **: g_ascii_strcasecmp: assertion 's1 != NULL' failed
changed it to variable j
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753009
Skip keys from the fmtp, which we already use ourselves for the
caps. Some software is adding random things like clock-rate into
the fmtp, and we would otherwise here set a string-typed clock-rate
in the caps... and thus fail to create valid RTP caps
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753009
Don't hold the main splitmux part lock over
the parent state change function, as it prevents
posting error messages that happen. Since the purpose
is to prevent typefinding from proceeding, use a
separate mutex just for that.
Need to check that the number of bytes we want to copy from the adapter
actually is available and handle the error case gracefully. This error
may happen if malformed packets are received and we don't have a
complete frame.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752663
The subtitle buffer we push out should not include a NUL terminator
as part of the data, we just add such a terminator for safety, but
it should not be included in the buffer size.
A NUL terminator is not valid UTF-8, so checks will fail if it's
included in the size, and the NUL will be replaced by the fallback
character specified when converting, i.e. '*'.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752421
In certain applications, splitting into files named after a base
location template and an incremental sequence number is not enough.
This signal gives more fine-grained control to the application to
decide how to name the files.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750106
For more optimised RTP packet handling: means we don't
need to map the input buffer again but can just re-use
the mapping the base class has already done.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750235
For more optimised RTP packet handling: means we don't
need to map the input buffer again but can just re-use
the map the base class has already done.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750235
Estimating it from the RTP time will give us the PTS, so in cases of PTS!=DTS
we would produce wrong DTS. As now the estimated DTS is based on the clock,
don't store it in the jitterbuffer items as it would otherwise be used in the
skew calculations and would influence the results. We only really need the DTS
for timer calculations.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749536
When a new time segment is received upstream is going to restart
with a new atom. Make the neededbytes and todrop variables
reflect that to avoid waiting too much or dropping the
initial bytes that contain the header.
The adapter might have data remaining from the previous segment,
push it all before clearing the adapter and starting a new segment.
It can accumulate data if it had pushed and got not-linked, returning
immediately without processing all the data. Before starting a new
segment this data should be handled.
The amount of time that is completely expired and not worth waiting for,
is the duration of the packets in the gap (gap * duration) - the
latency (size) of the jitterbuffer (priv->latency_ns). This is the duration
that we make a "multi-lost" packet for.
The "late" concept made some sense in 0.10 as it reflected that a buffer
coming in had not been waited for at all, but had a timestamp that was
outside the jitterbuffer to wait for. With the rewrite of the waiting
(timeout) mechanism in 1.0, this no longer makes any sense, and the
variable no longer reflects anything meaningful (num > 0 is useless,
the duration is what matters)
Fixed up the tests that had been slightly modified in 1.0 to allow faulty
behavior to sneak in, and port some of them to use GstHarness.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738363
This reverts commit 05bd708fc5.
The reverted patch is wrong and introduces a regression because there
may still be time to receive some of the packets included in the gap
if they are reordered.
Avoids accumulating all samples from a fragmented stream that could
lead to a 'index-too-big' error once it goes over 50MB of data. It
could reach that before 2h of playback so it doesn't take that long.
As upstream elements are providing data in time format they should
be the ones that have more information about the full media index
and should be able to seek if possible.
upstream_newsegment isn't really clear on what it means, it is set
to TRUE when the upstream element sends a segment in TIME format, so
rename it to be more clear about it.
It is important to know this because it means that upstream has
a notion of time and qtdemux is likely being driven by an upstream
element that is reading from a higher level abstraction than a file,
such as a DASH, MSS or DLNA element.
In fragmented streaming, multiple moov/moof will be parsed and their
previously stored samples array might leak when new values are parsed.
The parse_trak and callees won't free the previously stored values
before parsing the new ones.
In step-by-step, this is what happens:
1) initial moov is parsed, traks as well, streams are created. The
trak doesn't contain samples because they are in the moof's trun
boxes. n_samples is set to 0 while parsing the trak and the samples
array is still NULL.
2) moofs are parsed, and their trun boxes will increase n_samples and
create/extend the samples array
3) At some point a new moov might be sent (bitrate switching, for example)
and parsing the trak will overwrite n_samples with the values from
this trak. If the n_samples is set to 0 qtdemux will assume that
the samples array is NULL and will leak it when a new one is
created for the subsequent moofs.
This patch makes qtdemux properly free previous sample data before
creating new ones and adds an assert to catch future occurrences of
this issue when the code changes.
This reverts commit d46631c5c7.
pad only handle EOS events but not EOS flow, and will push the buffer again
resulting in an assertion error. So we should not handle the buffer
and return EOS flow.
goom_core.c: In function 'goom_update':
goom_core.c:685:5: error: 'param2' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
goom_lines_switch_to (goomInfo->gmline2, mode, param2, amplitude, couleur);
^
goom_core.c:684:5: error: 'param1' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
goom_lines_switch_to (goomInfo->gmline1, mode, param1, amplitude, couleur);
^
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752053
endpos variable does not correctly understand in the
4.6.3 GCC version. So compile error appears when we do
compile rtph261pay using jhbuild.
This patch is fixed the compile error in 4.6.3 GCC version.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751985
Draft 16 of "RTP Payload Format for VP8" states in section 4.2 that:
R: Bit reserved for future use. MUST be set to zero and MUST be
ignored by the receiver.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751929
gstrtph261pay.c: In function 'gst_rtp_h261_pay_class_init':
gstrtph261pay.c:1003:17: error: variable 'gobject_class' set but not used [-Werror=unused-but-set-variable]
GObjectClass *gobject_class;
Implementation according to RFC 4587.
Payloader create fragments on MB boundaries in order to match MTU size
the best it can. Some decoders/depayloaders in the wild are very strict
about receiving a continuous bit-stream (e.g. no no-op bits between
frames), so the payloader will shift the compressed bit-stream of a
frame to align with the last significant bit of the previous frame.
Depayloader does not try to be fancy in case of packet loss. It simply
drops all packets for a frame if there is a loss, keeping it simple.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751886
If we have a clock, update "now" now with the very latest running time we have.
If timers are unscheduled below we otherwise wouldn't update now (it's only updated
when timers expire), and also for the very first loop iteration now would otherwise
always be 0.
Also the time is used for the timeout functions, e.g. to calculate any times
for the next timeouts and we would otherwise pass too old times there.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751636
We always pushed one buffer into the adapter, then handled exactly that one
buffer and flushed it from the adapter. Now also don't memcpy() the actual
payload but just attach the input buffer's data to the output buffer.
This code still needs some serious refactoring/rewriting.