Unless the video format has an alpha component (ARGB, ...), set the
video_surface opaque.
In the usual case where the black area_surface has the same size as the
video_surface (eg: run gst-play-1.0 video.mp4), this makes the black
surface totally occluded which makes weston compositor's life easier
since it can ignore that surface.
Also unconditionally set the black area_surface opaque.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=778078
This is specific to when the waylandsink is not being embedded. In
this patch we pass the render lock to the window so it can safely
call gst_wl_window_set_render_rectangle() with the new size.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=722343
When we don't have a viewporter (scaling support), we can't use the
1x1 scaleup image trick. Instead, we need to allocate a buffer with
the same size as the area that need to have black background.
This makes the viewporter interface optional. The end result is
obviously far from optimal, though it greatly helps testing on older
compostitors or gnome-wayland. We can make it strictly needed later when
this new interface get widely adopted.
If waylandsink is the owner of the display then it is in charge
of catching input events on the surface.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=733682
Signed-off-by: Tifaine Inguere <tifaine.inguere@st.com>
Reviewed-by: Benjamin Gaignard <benjamin.gaignard@linaro.org>
The main reason behind this is that when the video caps change and the video
subsurface needs to resize and change position, the wl_subsurface.set_position
call needs a commit in its parent in order to take effect. Previously,
the parent was the application's surface, over which there is no control.
Now, the parent is inside the sink, so we can commit it and change size smoothly.
As a side effect, this also allows the sink to draw its black borders on
its own, without the need for the application to do that. And another side
effect is that this can now allow resizing the sink when it is in top-level
mode and have it respect the aspect ratio.
1) We know that gst_wayland_sink_render() will commit the surface
in the same thread a little later, as gst_wl_window_set_video_info()
is always called from there, so we can save the compositor from
some extra calculations.
2) We should not commit a resize with the new video info while we are still
showing the buffer of the previous video, with the old caps, as that
would probably be a visible resize glitch.
* own_surface is not needed anymore
* gst_wl_window_from_surface is not used externally anymore
* many initializations to 0 are not needed (GObject does them)
This means that the given surface in set_window_handle can now be
the window's top-level surface on top of which waylandsink creates
its own subsurface for rendering the video.
This has many advantages:
* We can maintain aspect ratio by overlaying the subsurface in
the center of the given area and fill the parent surface's area
black in case we need to draw borders (instead of adding another
subsurface inside the subsurface given from the application,
so, less subsurfaces)
* We can more easily support toolkits without subsurfaces (see gtk)
* We can get properly use gst_video_overlay_set_render_rectangle
as our api to set the video area size from the application and
therefore remove gst_wayland_video_set_surface_size.
This drops the ugly GstWaylandWindowHandle structure and is much
more elegant because we can now request the display separately
from the window handle. Therefore the window handle can be requested
in render(), i.e. when it is really needed and we can still open
the correct display for getting caps and creating the pool earlier.
This change also separates setting the wl_surface from setting its size.
Applications should do that by calling two functions in sequence:
gst_video_overlay_set_window_handle (overlay, surface);
gst_wayland_video_set_surface_size (overlay, w, h);
This is the initial implementation, without the GstVideoOverlay.expose()
method. It only implements using an external (sub)surface and resizing
it with GstWaylandVideo.