Introduces [x-absolute, y-absolute] properties
for positioning in +/- MAX_DOUBLE range.
Adds new (h/v)alignment type "absolute" where coordinates
map the text area to be exactly inside of video canvas for [0, 0] - [1, 1]:
[0, 0]: Top-Lefts of video and text are aligned
[0.5, 0.5]: Centers are aligned
[1, 1]: Bottom-Rights are aligned
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761251
libgstreamer currently exports some debug category
symbols GST_CAT_*, but those are not declared in any
public headers.
Some plugins and libgstvideo just use GST_DEBUG_CATEGORY_EXTERN()
to declare and use those, but that's just not right at
all, and it won't work on Windows with MSVC. Instead look
up the categories via the API.
In order to detect graphical user input on the
textoverlay, the resulting rendering properties
need to be exposed to applications.
Fixes delayx property declaration.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761251
The current position property is limited to X,Y positions
in the range of [0, 1]. This patch allows full control
over the overlay position, including partially outside
of the video area.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761251
FEC may only be used when PLC is enabled on the audio decoder,
as it relies on empty buffers to generate audio from the next
buffer. Hooking to the gap events doesn't work as the audio
decoder does not like more buffers output than it sends.
The length of data to generate using FEC from the next packet
is determined by rounding the gap duration to nearest. This
ensures that duration imprecision does not cause quantization
to 2.5 milliseconds less than available. Doing so causes the
Opus API to fail decoding. Such duration imprecision is common
in live cases.
The buffer to consider when determining the length of audio
to be decoded is the previous buffer when using FEC, and the
new buffer otherwise. In the FEC case, this means we determine
the amount of audio from the previous buffer, whether it was
missing or not (and get the data either from this buffer, or
the current one if the previous one was missing).
rename gst-launch --> gst-launch-1.0
replace old elements with new elements(ffmpegcolorspace -> videoconvert, ffenc_** -> avenc_**)
fix caps in examples
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759432
The result of the two expressions will be promoted to guint64 anyway,
perform all the arithmetic in 64 bits to avoid potential overflows.
CID 1338690, CID 1338691
We always require the channel-mapping-field. If it's 0 we require nothing
else, otherwise we need channels, stream-count and coupled count to be
available.
oggdemux is outputting the meta now, and only outputs if it should really
apply to the current buffer. Previously we would skip N samples also if we
started the decoder in the middle of the stream.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
It is doing the wrong thing because of the Opus pre-skip: while the timestamps
are shifted by the pre-skip, the granule positions are not shifted.
oggmux is doing the right thing here already.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
The first frame has lookahead less samples, the last frame might have some
padding or we might have to encode another frame of silence to get all our
input into the encoded data.
This is because of a) the lookahead at the beginning of the encoding, which
shifts all data by that amount of samples and b) the padding needed to fill
the very last frame completely.
Ideally we would use LPC to calculate something better than silence for the
padding to make the encoding as smooth as possible.
With this we get exactly the same amount of samples again in an
opusenc ! opusdec pipeline.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
... instead of relying on the segment. For the clipping at the start we assume
a proper value in the OpusHead, as generated by opusparse or opusenc.
Transmuxing in general is not guaranteed to produce the correct values, or
even have a OpusHead (e.g. when having RTP input).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
The granulepos does not have the pre-skip subtracted while timestamps do,
and the last granulepos will be shorter by the number of samples that should
be dropped because of padding in the end.
As such, extrapolating the granule of the beginning of the first frame will
lead to a negative value, which is not a problem but intentional.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=757153
Usually these loops only run once, so there's no problem here. But sometimes
they run twice, and by adding the number of bytes to a 16 bit pointer type we
would advance twice as much as we should.
Also use snd_pcm_frames_to_bytes() in alsasrc to calculate
the number of bytes to skip, same as we do in alsasink.
Thanks to Lucio A. Hernandez <lucio.a.hernandez@gmail.com> for reporting.
The alsamidisrc element allows to get input event from ALSA MIDI
sequencer devices, and possibly convert them to sound using some
downstream element like fluiddec.
Fixes#738687