https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson
With contributions from:
Tim-Philipp Müller <tim@centricular.com>
Mathieu Duponchelle <mathieu.duponchelle@opencreed.com>
Jussi Pakkanen <jpakkane@gmail.com> (original port)
Highlights of the features provided are:
* Faster builds on Linux (~40-50% faster)
* The ability to build with MSVC on Windows
* Generate Visual Studio project files
* Generate XCode project files
* Much faster builds on Windows (on-par with Linux)
* Seriously fast configure and building on embedded
... and many more. For more details see:
http://blog.nirbheek.in/2016/05/gstreamer-and-meson-new-hope.htmlhttp://blog.nirbheek.in/2016/07/building-and-developing-gstreamer-using.html
Building with Meson should work on both Linux and Windows, but may
need a few more tweaks on other operating systems.
This makes gstconfig.h completely arch-independent. Should cover all
compilers that gstreamer is known to build on, and all architectures
that I could find information on. People are encouraged to file bugs if
their platform/arch is missing.
A new event which precedes EOS in situations where we
need downstream to unblock any pads waiting on a stream
before we can send EOS. E.g, decodebin draining a chain
so it can switch pads.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768995
Redirection messages are already used in fragmented sources and in
uridecodebin, so it makes sense to introduce these as an official message
type.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=631673
In some corner cases, the error 'code' part passed to
GST_ELEMENT_ERROR() is a valid define as well, in which
case it won't survive two levels of macro expansion, but
only one. Fixes:
oss4-sink.c: In function ‘gst_oss4_sink_open’:
error: ‘GST_RESOURCE_ERROR_0x00000002’ undeclared (first use in this function)
GST_ ## domain ## _ERROR_ ## code, __txt, __dbg, __FILE__,
which is from GST_ELEMENT_ERROR(el,RESOURCE,OPEN_WRITE,..)
and OPEN_WRITE happens to be defined to 2 here.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756806https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=769117
gst_structure_id_get() returns a new reference so the returned object is
actually (transfer full).
The unit tests was already unreffing the objects.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768776
gst_structure_id_get() returns a new reference so the returned device is
actually (transfer full).
The code using this API was already correct but the code example in
comments was not.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768776
We don't free this from gst_deinit() but from gst_task_cleanup_all(),
so more GStreamer API may be called. In particular makes unit tests
work again with CK_FORK=no.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768577
This ensures that all async operations (started from gst_element_call_async())
have been completed and so there is no extra thread running.
Fix races when checking for leaks on unit tests as some of those
operations were still running when the leaks tracer was checking for
leaked objects.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=768577
gcc 6 has problems detecting and avoiding throwing
a warning for tautological compares in macros (they
should only trigger for compares outside macros).
Avoid them with a nasty cast of one parameter to void *
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764526
Especially if multiple threads are waiting for buffers to be available again,
the current code was wrong. Fix this and document clearly how the GstPoll is
supposed to be used.
Also fix some potential races with reading from the GstPoll before writing
actually happened.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767979
It might happen that we popped the message before writing of the control
happened. In this case we just have to retry again a bit later, and failure to
do so will cause an additional byte in the control and the GSource /
gst_poll_wait() to always wake up again immediately.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750397
And also mention what the expected values of errno are going to be.
write_control() will only ever return FALSE if there was a critical error. It
will never return because of EINTR, EAGAIN or EWOULDBLOCK.
read_control() will return FALSE if there was no byte to read, in which case
errno would be EWOULDBLOCK.
In all other cases there was a critical error.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750397
On timer GstPolls it will cause the control socket state to become
inconsistent as now one less read_control() than write_control() be would
needed.
Similarly, read_control() and write_control() are only valid on timer
GstPolls.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750397
This might fail even under correct usage, e.g. if read_control() is called
from another thread before write_control() finished in another. It has to be
retried then, or other measures have to be taken, depending on how it is used
by the surrounding code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750397
This addresses slightly different race conditions on Linux and Windows, and
fixes gst_poll_read_control() when control_pending == 0.
On Linux, the socketpair() used for control should not be made O_NONBLOCK.
If there's any propagation delay between set->control_write_fd.fd and
set->control_read_fd.fd, even the mutex now held will not be sufficient to
prevent a race condition. There's no benefit to using O_NONBLOCK, here.
Only liabilities.
For Windows, it's necessary to fix the race condition between testing
set->control_pending and performing WAKE_EVENT()/RELEASE_EVENT(). This is
accomplished by acquiring and holding set->lock, for both of these operations.
We could optimize the Linux version by making this Windows-specific.
For consistency with the Linux implementation, Windows' RELEASE_EVENT()
has also been made to block, although it should never happen.
Also, changed release_wakeup() to return TRUE and decrement control_pending
only when > 0. Furthermore, RELEASE_EVENT() is called only when
control_pending == 1.
Finally, changed control_pending to use normal, non-atomic arithmetic
operations, since it's now protected by set->lock.
Note: even though the underlying signaling mechanisms are blocking,
release_wakeup() is effectively non-blocking, as it will only attempt to read
from control_read_fd.fd after a byte has been written to control_write_fd.fd
or WaitForSingleObject() after it's been signaled.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750397
GCC emits an error for this with -Werror:
plugin.c:22:1: error: 'gst_plugin_desc' initialized and declared 'extern' [-Werror]
This matches how glib does symbol exporting.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767463
If the prototypes in the public API have dllimport in them when building
statically on Windows, the compiler will look for symbols with symbol
mangling and indirection corresponding to a DLL. This will cause a build
failure when trying to link tests/examples/etc.
External users of GStreamer also need to define -DGST_STATIC_COMPILATION
if they want to link to static gstreamer libraries on Windows.
A similar version of this patch has been committed to all gstreamer
repositories.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=767463
We already had a _full() version, but having that alone seems inconsistent.
Add a non-full version that mirrors the behaviour of gst_pad_link() vs
gst_pad_link_full().
For GST_EXPORT define and also things like GST_DISABLE_REGISTRY.
Hopefully fixes the following build failure on cerbero-cross-mingw32:
helpers/gst-plugin-scanner.c:50: undefined reference to `_imp___gst_disable_registry_cache'
This static library gets included directly into libgstreamer-1.0.so, so it needs
the same GST_EXPORTS definition as the rest of the code that's compiled into
that otherwise it will try to find the constants it uses from gstinfo via DLL
importing (__declspec(dllimport)).
Fixes https://ci.gstreamer.net/job/cerbero-cross-mingw32/4393/
__declspec(dllexport/import) are supported by GCC and are needed for
properly generating code that fetches the values of constants from DLLs
built with __declspec(dllexport) which happens when anything using
GST_EXPORT is built with MSVC.
See: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/619w14ds.aspx
Essentially, if you built gstreamer with MSVC and then tried to use
constants from it (such as GST_TYPE_CAPS) in a plugin, GCC would
retrieve the address of the value instead of the value itself.
This means applications and bin sub-classes can easily track when
a new child element is added to the pipeline sub-hierarchy or
removed.
Currently doesn't signal deep added/removed for elements inside
a bin if a bin is added/removed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=578933
Make it explicit that the pad is only blocked while the callback is running,
and the pad will be unblocked again once the callback returned.
If BLOCK and IDLE behaviour is needed, both need to be used.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766002
When doing a transition from PLAYING to PLAYING, we will fail
to forward an EOS message on the bus, and noone else will ever
send it because there'll be no actual state changed message.
Allow EOS through directly in that case.
If there is only one pad in the internal pads, when folding for
LATENCY queries it will just drop the response if it's not live.
This is maybe not the proper fix, but it will just accept the first
peer responses, and if there are any other pads, it will only take
them into account if the response is live.
This *should* properly handle the aggregation/folding behaviour of
multiple live peer responses, while at the same time handling the
simple one-pad-only-and-forward use-case
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=766360
A lot of debug categories are declared in element class_init
functions, which don't get run until the element is first created
(not just registered in the plugin load function). This means
that --gst-debug-help doesn't print out a lot of categories.
Creating an instance of each element from the element factory
makes them visible, at some extra cost - 2-3 times longer, which can
be a full second or two of extra waiting. Yikes!
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=741001
When activating a pad in PULL mode, it might already be in PUSH mode. We now
first try to deactivate it from PUSH mode and then try to activate it in PULL
mode. If the activation fails, we would set the pad to flushing and set it
back to its old mode. However the old mode is wrong, the pad is not in PUSH
mode anymore but in NONE mode.
This fixes e.g. typefind in decodebin reactivating PUSH/PULL mode if upstream
actually fails to go into PULL mode after first PUSHING data to typefind.
This calls a function from another thread, asynchronously. This is to be
used for cases when a state change has to be performed from a streaming
thread, directly via gst_element_set_state() or indirectly e.g. via SEEK
events.
Calling those functions directly from the streaming thread will cause
deadlocks in many situations, as they might involve waiting for the
streaming thread to shut down from this very streaming thread.
This is mostly a convenience function around a GThreadPool and is for example
used by GstBin to continue asynchronous state changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760532
Passing years > 9999, months > 12 or days > 31 to gst_date_time_new() will
cause an assertion and generally does not make much sense. Instead consider it
as a parsing error like hours > 24 and return NULL.
This previously caused uninitialized memory unless something else was
initializing all the fields explicitly to something.
To be on the safe side, we also allocate metas without init function to all
zeroes now as it was relatively common.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764902
Be notified in the application thread via bus messages about
notify::* and deep-notify::* property changes, instead of
having to deal with it in a non-application thread.
API: gst_element_add_property_notify_watch()
API: gst_element_add_property_deep_notify_watch()
API: gst_element_remove_property_notify_watch()
API: gst_message_new_property_notify()
API: gst_message_parse_property_notify()
API: GST_MESSAGE_PROPERTY_NOTIFY
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763142
Checking the current element's state when we're adding pads to
the parent element is checking the wrong thing.
Silences a 'attempting to add an inactive pad to a running element'
warning when adding a ghost pad to a running parent bin of the parent
bin of the element.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764176
This is a useful function to automatically add ghost pads when linking
two elements across bin boundaries without know their exact parentage.
e.g. when using gst_parse_bin_from_description (with or without it ghosting pads),
one can simply retreive the src/sink pads from the bin to link to another pad.
Similar functionality is provided by gst_element_link_pads{_full}() however only
by pad name rather than by actual pads.
API: gst_pad_link_maybe_ghosting_full
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764176
Updated the GST_REFCOUNTING logging so that it includes the pointer
address of the object that is being disposed or finalized.
With this change is is then possible to match up GST_REFCOUNTING log messages
for object allocation/disposal/finalization. This can help with diagnosing
"memory leaks" in applications that have not correctly disposed of all the
GStreamer objects it creates.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749427
It returned TRUE when regression failed, while not setting any of the out
parameters. This caused uninitialized data from the stack to be used for
setting the clock calibration.
PUSH and PULL mode have opposite scenarios for IDLE and BLOCK
probes.
For PUSH it will BLOCK with some data type and IDLE won't have a type.
For PULL it will BLOCK before getting some data and will be IDLE when
some data is obtained.
The check in hook_marshall was specific for PUSH mode and would cause
PULL probes to fail to be called. Adding different checks for the mode
to fix this issue.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761211
We want to use the flag/enum nicks here, not only because they
are shorter but also because in case of element-specific enums
and flags we abuse the enum/flag name field for the description,
and we don't want that printed in the dot file.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763814
Make compiler issue a warning for common beginner mistakes such as:
...
gst_buffer_make_writable (buf);
gst_buffer_map (buf, &map, GST_MAP_WRITE);
...
and similar. Only do this for some functions for now.
Don't keep the registry locked whilst iterating over the plugins
or features with a filter function. This would deadlock if the
callback tried to access the registry from the function. Instead,
make a copy of the feature/plugin list and then filter it without
holding the registry lock. This is still considerably faster than
the alternative which would be to use a GstIterator.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756738
By default, gst_parse_launch_full() creates a GstPipeline if there's more
than one toplevel element. Add a flag to let it use a GstBin instead.
Also fix the parser to let it use this flag for GST_TYPE_ELEMENT property
values, to avoid having GstPipelines inside other GstPipelines.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763457
When going from READY to NULL all element pads are deactivated. If
simultaneously the pad is being removed from the element with
gst_element_remove_pad() and the pad is unparented, there is a race
where the deactivation will assert (g_critical) if the parent is lost at
the wrong time.
The proposed fix will check parent only once and retain it to avoid the
race.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761912
First load all system presets, then all from the environment variable, then
from the app directory, then from the user directory. Any one in the chain
with the highest version completely replaces all previous ones, later ones
with lower versions are merged in without replacing existing presets.
This is basically the same behaviour as before, just that GST_PRESET_PATH is
inserted as another source of directories between the system and app presets.
It was added in ca08af1f17, but was
accidentially overriding the user preset path there. Which caused inconsistent
behaviour as new presets were still stored in the system path, just not loaded
from there. Meaning you could store a new preset (in the user path), just for
GstPreset to not find it anymore later (because it only looked in the
GST_PRESET_PATH instead of the user path).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764034
The alias define GST_TYPE_PARENT_BUFFER_META_API_TYPE is wrong and
breaks the usage of gst_buffer_get_parent_buffer_meta().
This patch fixes the GType alias and make another alias to keep the API
compatibility guarded by GST_DISABLE_DEPRECATED.
Also added a unit test.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=763112
gst_structure_new_empty() is not returning NULL in any valid scenarios,
checking for NULL here is useless. Especially because we would dereference any
NULL right after the NULL check again.
CID 1352037.
We previously check if the string ends on .class, as such strrchr() should
return something non-NULL. Add an assertion for that.
CID 1349642.
Pretty much every single element does
gst_element_class_add_pad_template (element_class,
gst_static_pad_template_get (&some_templ));
which is both confusing and unnecessary. We might just
as well add a function to do that in one step.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762778
When holding a regular ref it will cause the GstBus to never
reach 0 references and it won't be destroyed unless the application
explicitly calls gst_bus_remove_signal_watch().
Switching to weakref will allow the GstBus to be destroyed.
The application is still responsible for destroying the
GSource.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=762552
This reverts commit b427997119.
It breaks things that used to work before, even if the change by itself is
correct and the previous code is just working around deeper bugs in the async
state change code. Let's go back to what previously worked and then fix async
state changes in general.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760532
When calling gst_pad_activate_mode() on a ghostpad
gst_ghost_pad_activate_push_default() will be called. This will call
gst_pad_activate_mode() on the proxypad (which is internal of the
ghostpad), calling gst_ghost_pad_internal_activate_push_default(), which
again will call gst_pad_activate_mode() on the original ghostpad.
By simply returning TRUE in
gst_ghost_pad_internal_activate_push_default() the redundant call to
gst_pad_activate_mode() (for the same pad) is avoided.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761913
When allocating a new buffer in the pool, both the do_alloc_buffer() and the
vmethod, alloc_buffer(), receive the parameter GstBufferPoolAcquireParams.
Nonetheless, when default_acquire_buffer() calls the do_alloc_buffer() it does
not pass the received GstBufferPoolAcquireParams, so when the user pass those
parameters they are ignored by alloc_buffer() vmethod.
This one-liner patch pass the received acquire params to do_alloc_buffer().
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761824
Fixes a race where an entry is set to BUSY in
gst_system_clock_id_wait_jitter() and is UNSCHEDULED before
gst_system_clock_id_wait_jitter_unlocked() starts processing it. The
wakeup added by gst_system_clock_id_unschedule() must be cleaned up.
Two stress tests are added. One test that triggers the specific issue
described above. The second stresses the code path where a wait is
rescheduled because the poll returned early.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761586
If the clockentry is too late and is unscheduled before it gets
a change to detect its lateness the wakeup count and the poll are
used but never properly cleaned up. This leaves it in a dirty state
that is going to mess with the next clock entry waiting requests.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=761586
Change the gst_tracer_record_new() api to take the parameters the make the
spec structure directly. This allows us to own the top-level structure and
also collect the args so that we can take ownership of the sub-structures.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760821
We're comparing a pointer type with '\0' here, which
probably isn't right, and the loop condition made sure
that classes[0] is != NULL already, so it's pointless.
Was probaby meant to check if the string pointed to is
not empty, so make it do that instead.
When choosing the first entry from the list, gst_system_clock_async_thread
must set the entry state to busy before releasing the clock lock. Otherwise
a new entry could be added to the beginning of the list and
gst_system_clock_async_thread will be unaware and keep waiting on the entry
it has already chosen.
Also improved messages about expected state and bumped them to ERROR level
to detect unexpected state changes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760757
self->spec is got using g_value_get_boxed(), which is a transfer none function.
So the same should not be freed, which is resulting in wrong behavior.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760821
GstTracerValueFlags is not being initialized and the same could result in wrong
comparision and behavior. Hence initializing it to GST_TRACER_VALUE_FLAGS_NONE.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760821
Only hide GstTracer and GstTracerRecord API behind GST_USE_UNSTABLE_API,
but don't spew any warnings, otherwise everyone has to define this
to avoid compiler warnings.
This reverts parts of commit 89ee5d948d.
We use this class to register tracer log entry metadata and build a log
template. With the log template we can serialize log data very efficiently.
This also simplifies the logging code, since that is now a simple varargs
function that is not exposing the implementation details.
Add docs for the new class and basic tests.
Remove the previous log handler.
Fixes#760267
If no providers for a particular class could be found, then removing unmatched
filters would cause all devices to be returned instead which is not at all what
the user intended. We still return 0 for unmatched filters.
Other gst libraries and/or elements may want to add some debug logging to an
external debug system or implement delayed debugging for performance reasons.
Exposes the internal __gst_vasprintf as gst_info_vasprintf which has a fallback
to g_vasprintf if the debug system is disabled.
API: gst_info_vasprintf
API: gst_info_strdup_vprintf
API: gst_info_strdup_printf
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=760421
GstControlSourceGetValue() value paramater is a gdouble, not a GValue
and GstControlSourceGetValueArray doesn't return a GstValueArray but
an array of double.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758668
Previously we used the latter one still for the tracer utility code, causing
undefined references in the resulting binary if the debugging system was
disabled but the tracer system not.
It's used by the debugging and tracer subsystem and in various files, make it
a central thing that is initialized independ of the existence of those
subsystems.
The parse-launch API automagically handles dynamic pads and performs delayed
linking as needed, without any feedback about whether the linking succeeded or
not however. If a delayed dynamic link can't be completed for whatever reason,
parse-launch will simply wait in case a suitable pad appears later. This may
never happen though, in which case the pipeline may just hang forever.
Try to improve this by connecting to the "no-more-pads" signal of any element
with dynamic pads and posting a warning message for the related outstanding
dynamic links when "no-more-pads" is emitted.
Fixes#760003
'gst_element_post_message' takes the ownership of the message, so it
shall unref it when there is no post_message implementation. Otherwise
message is leaked.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759300
This lock seems to exist only to prevent elements from changing states while
events are being processed. However events are going to be processed
nonetheless in those elements if sent directly via pads, so protection must
already be implemented inside the elements for event handling if it is needed.
As such having the lock here is not very useful and is actually causing
various deadlocks in different situations as described in
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744040
Otherwise each bin might have a different latency in the end, causing
synchronization problems.
The bin will still first handle latency internally as before, but gives the
overall pipeline the opportunity to update the latency of the whole pipeline
afterwards.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=759125
The pad could be activated but flushing because of a FLUSH_START event. That's
not what we're looking for here, we want to check for activated pads.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758928
This is useful for feature that are produced after probing a specific
node. You want to reload this plugin if the specific node(s) have been
removed, added, or reloaded.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758080
In plugin is responsible for calculating a hash of the dependencies
in order to determine if the cache should be invalidated or not.
Currently, the hash combining method removes a bit of the original
have before combining with an addition. As we use 32bits for our hash
and shift 1 bit for each file and directory, that resulting hash only
account for the last 32 files. And is more affected by the last file.
Rotating technique (shifting, and adding back the ending bit), can be
use to make the addition non-commutative. In a way that different order
gives different hashes. In this case, I don't preserve this behaviour
because the order in which the files are provided by the OS is
irrelevant.
In most cases, the XOR operation is used to combine hashes. In this
code we use the addition. I decided to preserve the addition because
we make use of non-random hash ((guint) -1) in the algorithm for
matching files that are not really part of the hash (symlinks, special
files). Doing successive XOR on this value, will simply switch from
full ones, to full zero. The XOR used with whitelist has been preserved
as it's based on a fairly randomized hash (g_str_hash).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758078
On iOS/OSX g_get_current_time was used by default. However, mach_time is
the preferred high-resolution monotonic clock to be used on Apple
platforms.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=758012
Helps catching when a state change is starting and ending.
It is also possible to track the end of state changes by checking the
async-done or state-change messages.
This is particularly important for elements that do async state changes.
Validate that the proxy pad indeed accepts the caps by also
comparing with the pad template caps, otherwise when the pad
had no internally linked pads it would always return true.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754112
Instead of re-sending sticky events over and over to a not-linked
pad, mark them as sent the first time. If the not-linked came from
downstream, it already received the events. If the pad is actually
not-linked, the sticky events will be rescheduled when the
pad is linked anyway.
There is a similar explanation in gst_caps_make_writable, but the existing
documentation can be misleading since it does not define what 'is already
writable' means.
Also note when this function is meant to be used.
API: GST_BUFFER_DTS_OR_PTS
Many scenarios/elements require dealing with streams of buffers that
might have DTS set (i.e. encoded data, potentially reordered)
To simplify getting the increasing "timestamp" of those buffers, create
a macro that will return the DTS if valid, and if not the PTS
Updated gst_segment_position_from_stream_time and gst_segment_to_stream_time to reflect correct calculations for the case when the applied rate is negative.
Pasting from design docs:
===============================
Stream time is calculated using the buffer times and the preceding SEGMENT
event as follows:
stream_time = (B.timestamp - S.start) * ABS (S.applied_rate) + S.time
For negative rates, B.timestamp will go backwards from S.stop to S.start,
making the stream time go backwards.
===============================
Therefore, the calculation for applied_rate < 0 should be:
stream_time = (S.stop - B.timestamp) * ABS (S.applied_rate) + S.time
and the reverse:
B.timestamp = S.stop - (stream_time - S.time) / ABS (S.applied_rate)
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756810
An ASYNC READY->PAUSED might have failed without the bin code noticing during
the state change, in which case we will never get PAUSED->READY and would leak
messages.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=756611
This way one can define new tracing probes without changing the core. We are
using our own quark table, as 1) we only want to initialize them if we're
tracing, 2) we want to share them with the tracers.
Instead of a single invoke() function and a 'mask', register to individual
hooks. This avoids one level of indirection and allows us to remove the
hook enums. The message enms are now renamed to hook enums.
This way we only expand the structure when we're logging. This allows us to
meassure the pure tracing seperately from the logging.
Also add some comments on further improvements.
Keep tracer base class in tracer and move core support into the utils module.
Add a unstable-api guard to the tracer.h so that external modules would need to
acknowledge the status by setting GST_USE_UNSTABLE_API.
When adding an element to a bin we need to propagate the GstContext's
to/from the element.
This moves the GstContext list from GstBin to GstElement and adds
convenience functions to get the currently set list of GstContext's.
This does not deal with the collection of GstContext's propagated
using GST_CONTEXT_QUERY. Element subclasses are advised to call
gst_element_set_context if they need to propagate GstContext's
received from the context query.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705579
A proxy-pad should always proxy the caps related queries
and events to its down or upstream peers on the other side
of the element. Falling back to a caps query seems wrong.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754112
gst_segment_to_position might cause confusion, especially with the addition of
gst_segment_position_from_stream_time . Deprecated gst_segment_to_position
now, and replaced it with gst_segment_position_from_running_time.
Also added unit tests.
gst_segment_position_from_stream_time() will convert stream time into a
position in the segment so that gst_segment_to_stream_time() with that
position returns the same stream time. It will return -1 if the stream time
given is not inside the segment.
When a running-time-offset is stored in the event, it could become smaller
than 0 although the event is otherwise correct. This can happen when pad
offsets are used.
To prevent this, we set the timestamp to -diff, so that in the end the sum of
both is exactly 0.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=754356
This fixes a race where a state change may return failure if it has
request pads that are deactivated and removed (and thus have no
parent) at the same time as the element changes state and (de)activates
its pads.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=755342
In some cases, probes might want to handle the buffer/event/query
themselves and stop the data from travelling further downstream.
While this was somewhat possible with buffer/events and using
GST_PROBE_DROP, it was not applicable to queries, and would result
in the query failing.
With this new GST_PROBE_HANDLED value, the buffer/event/query will
be considered as successfully handled, will not be pushed further
and the appropriate return value (TRUE or GST_FLOW_OK) will be returned
This also allows probes to return a non-default GstFlowReturn when dealing
with buffer push. This can be done by setting the
GST_PAD_PROBE_INFO_FLOW_RETURN() field accordingly
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=748643
It will make the default accept-caps handler use the pad template
caps instead of the query-caps result to check if the caps is
acceptable. This is aligned with what the design docs says the
accept-caps should do (be non-recursive) and should be faster. It
is *not* enabled by default, though.
API: GST_PAD_FLAG_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE
API: GST_PAD_IS_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE
API: GST_PAD_SET_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE
API: GST_PAD_UNSET_ACCEPT_TEMPLATE
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753623
If no date and only a time is given in gst_date_time_new_from_iso8601_string(),
assume that it is "today" and try to parse the time-only string. "Today" is
assumed to be in the timezone provided by the user (if any), otherwise Z -
just like the behavior of the existing code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753455
Add methods to add/remove the providers that should be hidden by this
provider. Also make a method to get a list of hidden providers.
This makes it possible to have multiple systems monitor the same devices
and remove duplicates.
Add a property to see all devices, even duplicate ones from hidden
providers.
The previous implementation was doing a direct call to the peer pad,
which resulted in query probes never being called on the original pad.
Instead of that, get the peer pad caps by using gst_pad_peer_query()
which will call probes in the expected fashion.
While calling gst_value_deserialize_sample, if there is a failure
after caps is ref'ed, then caps is getting leaked. Hence checking for
caps in fail: goto condition and unref'ing it
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=753338
When running gst_registry_scan_plugin_file we were losing the
information about the registry being loaded and ended up adding the
plugin to the default registry which was not correct.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=752662
In case there is an IDLE probe fired from gst_pad_push_data and it
doesn't return GST_FLOW_OK, the code jumps to the probe_stopped
label which tries to unref the data object. However, at this point
the data object belongs downstream and must not be touched.
By setting data = NULL, the code skips this unref.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org//show_bug.cgi?id=753151
Release the monitor lock when calling the provider start/stop methods.
Because we release the lock now, We need to make sure we check the
cookie again and keep track of started and removed providers.
The deviceproviders are added to the array sorted by their rank. Make
sure we keep this ordering when removing a provider.
We use _prepend to collect the devices, use g_list_reverse to get the
devices in the right order; sorted by rank and in the same order as
returned by the provider.
The check for the presence of the parent in the presence of
the NEED_PARENT flag was missing for the chain function. Also keep
a ref on the parent in case the pad is removed mid-chain.
Don't copy memory metas if we only copied part of the buffer, didn't
copy memories or merged memories. In all these cases the memory
structure has changed and the memory meta becomes meaningless.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751712
Do not ignore the caps argument when requesting a pad by template.
This is particularly harmful when the pad caps query by default
returns ANY so it will match the first template instead of the
one that actually intersects with the caps.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751235
A core meta which helps implement the old concept
of sub-buffering in some situations, by making it
possible for a buffer to keep a ref on a different
parent buffer. The parent buffer is unreffed when
the Meta is freed.
This meta is used to ensure that a buffer whose
memory is being shared to a child buffer isn't freed
and returned to a buffer pool until the memory
is.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750039
This macro didn't work well as it relied on the sign on the last
divided number (number of days). This value is most of the time
zero, and zero is considered positive in printf. Instead, deal with
the sign manually, and resuse the original macros for the rest. This
actually simplify the macro a lot.
So from this point, the remaining warning for libgstreamer are about
protected member not showing in the doc. This may need some discussion
with upstream gtk-doc people.
* Remove % in from of none macro
* Fixed GST_TYPE_FAGS -> GST_TYPE_FAG_SET
* Minor wording fix
* Can't link to GstUri.port, so split the .port part
There was few Since: mark missing their column. Also unify the way
we set the Since mark on enum value and structure members. These
sadly don't show up in the index.
This tell GI if this function is for actions (call) or is the
answer of this method being asynchronous (async). In this case
it's a call. This also silence warning from the GI scanner.
Just like gst_buffer_add_meta() this function should also be
transfer none. This also silence a gi warning about returning
a copy of a non boxed bare structure.
It make no sense to allow using that. Any use would lead to leak
of crash. Note that GMiniObject is entirely unusable as you cannot
cast from let's say GstBuffer to GstMiniObject.
Add utility to print signed value of time. This is useful to
trace running time values in gint64 or GstClockTimeDiff values.
Additionally, define GST_CLOCK_STIME_NONE to indicate an invalid
signed time value and validation macro. New macros are:
GST_CLOCK_STIME_NONE
GST_CLOCK_STIME_IS_VALID
GST_STIME_FORMAT
GST_STIME_ARGS
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=740575
Follow up of 7130230ddb
Provide the memory implementation the GstMapInfo that will be used to
map/unmap the memory. This allows the memory implementation to use
some scratch space in GstMapInfo to e.g. track different map/unmap
behaviour or store extra implementation defined data about the map
in use.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750319
This overrides the default latency handling and configures the specified
latency instead of the minimum latency that was returned from the LATENCY
query.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750782
gst_clock_wait_for_sync(), gst_clock_is_synced() and gst_clock_set_synced()
plus a signal to asynchronously wait for the clock to be synced.
This can be used by clocks to signal that they need initial synchronization
before they can report any time, and that this synchronization can also get
completely lost at some point. Network clocks, like the GStreamer
netclientclock, NTP or PTP clocks are examples for clocks where this is useful
to have as they can't report any time at all before they're synced.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=749391
There are gstmemory's available that operate in two memory domains
and need to ensure consistent access between these domains.
Imagine a scenario where e.g. the GLMemory is mapped twice in both
the GPU and the CPU domain. On unmap or a subsequent map, it would
like to ensure that the most recent data is available in the memory
domain requested. Either by flushing the writes and/or initiating a
DMA transfer. Without knowing which domain is being unmapped, the
memory does not know where the most recent data is to transfer to
the other memory domain.
Note: this still does not allow downgrading a memory map.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750319
Now that locking exclusively dows not always succeed, we need to signal
the failure case from gst_memory_init.
Rather than introducing an API or funcionality change to gst_memory_init,
workaround by checking exclusivity in the calling code.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750172
gst_memory_lock (mem, WRITE | EXCLUSIVE);
gst_memory_lock (mem, WRITE | EXCLUSIVE);
Succeeds when the part-miniobject.txt design doc suggests that this should fail:
"A gst_mini_object_lock() can fail when a WRITE lock is requested and
the exclusive counter is > 1. Indeed a GstMiniObject object with an
exclusive counter 1 is locked EXCLUSIVELY by at least 2 objects and is
therefore not writable."
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=750172