CLAMP checks both if value is '< 0' and '> max'. Value will never be a negative
number since it is an unsigned integer. Removing that check and only checking if
it is bigger than max and setting it appropriately.
CID 1256559
CLAMP checks both if n_taps is '< 0' and '> max_taps'. n_taps will never be a
negative number because it is an unsigned integer. Removing that check and only
making sure it isn't set bigger than max.
CID 1256558
Add an option to disable chroma resampling.
Improve the matrix option values so that you can choose to use the input
or output matrix or disable conversion.
Video buffer pool will update video alignment to respect stride alignment
requirement. But haven't updated it to video alignment in configure.
Which will cause user get wrong video alignment.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741501
This makes sure that the element is in the same state before start() is called
the very first time and every future call after the element was used already.
Also it ensure that we always have a clean state before start(), cleaned the
same way in every case.
The stop() vfunc might mess with some of our fields we have just
reset, which could cause memory leaks or invalid state taken over
to later.
Also the stop() vfunc, or anything called until it from another thread,
might want to be able to use the fields that were just resetted and
become confused because of that.
In the decoder we already had a workaround for things like this happening,
this workaround is not needed anymore.
Allows subclasses to do custom caps query replies.
Also exposes the standard caps query handler so subclasses can just
extend on top of it instead of reimplementing the caps query proxying.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741263
With the new caps query results the caps returned might have extra fields
that are not required by the decoder (framerate for image decoders) and it
causes a regression making, for example, jpegdec reject caps that don't
have framerates.
The accept-caps implementation will do 2 checks:
1) Do subset check with the template caps, making sure all the required
fields that are present on the template are present on the received caps.
2) Do a intersection check with the result of a caps query, making sure
that downstream can accept the fields in the received caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741263
Refactor the encoder's caps query proxying function to a common place
and use it in the videodecoder to proxy downstream restrictions.
The new function is private to the gstvideo lib.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741263
Update the new buffer size after alignment in the pool configuration
before calling the parent set_config. This ensures that the parent knows
about the buffer size that we will allocate and makes the size check
work in the release_buffer method.
Fixes https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741420
This reverts commit 406f32a946.
The problem was apparently that my video-orc.h was not updated and did not
include the prototype for that function. Only a "make clean" caused it to
be regenerated.
Avoid using a constant.
Avoid doing saturated adds, results are not supposed to overflow here.
Rework the C backup function a little in preparation for custom backup
functions in ORC.
See https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741015
It will cause the frame to be initialized with inconsistent values that then
later can cause crashes or any other kind of interesting and hard to debug
bugs.
In cases where we just call orc directly this is somewhat
superfluous, but let's do it anyway for consistency. In
other cases the compiler can hopefully use this to optimise
memory access a little.
when using variable taps and when we are limiting the number of taps,
recalculate the lanczos parameters to match the clamped value.
Set the max number of taps to 128
Make a small object to hold a pool of allocated temp lines.
Keep track of how many temp lines each conversion stage needs and use
this to allocate just enough temp lines from the temp lines object. from
the temp lines object.