# Implementing GstToc support in GStreamer elements ## General info about GstToc structure `GstToc` introduces a general way to handle chapters within multimedia formats. `GstToc` can be represented as tree structure with arbitrary hierarchy. Tree item can be either of two types: sequence or alternative. Sequence types acts like a part of the media data, for example audio track in CUE sheet, or part of the movie. Alternative types acts like some kind of selection to process a different version of the media content, for example DVD angles. `GstToc` has one constraint on the tree structure: it does not allow different entry types on the same level of the hierarchy, i.e. you shouldn’t have editions and chapters mixed together. Here is an example of right TOC: ``` ------- TOC ------- / \ edition1 edition2 | | -chapter1 -chapter3 -chapter2 ``` Here are two editions (alternatives), the first contains two chapters (sequence type), and the second has only one chapter. And here is an example of invalid TOC: ``` ------- TOC ------- / \ edition1 chapter1 | -chapter1 -chapter2 ``` Here you have edition1 and chapter1 mixed on the same level of hierarchy, and such TOC will be considered broken. `GstToc` has *entries* field of GList type which consists of children items. Each item is of type `GstTocEntry`. Also `GstToc` has list of tags and `GstStructure` called *info*. Please, use `GstToc.info` and `GstTocEntry.info` fields this way: create a `GstStructure`, put all info related to your element there and put this structure into the *info* field under the name of your element. Some fields in the *info* structure can be used for internal purposes, so you should use it in the way described above to not to overwrite already existent fields. Let’s look at `GstTocEntry` a bit closer. One of the most important fields is *uid*, which must be unique for each item within the TOC. This is used to identify each item inside TOC, especially when element receives TOC select event with UID to seek on. Field *subentries* of type GList contains children items of type `GstTocEntry`. Thus you can achieve arbitrary hierarchy level. Field *type* can be either `GST_TOC_ENTRY_TYPE_CHAPTER` or `GST_TOC_ENTRY_TYPE_EDITION` which corresponds to chapter or edition type of item respectively. Field *tags* is a list of tags related to the item. And field *info* is similar to `GstToc.info` described above. So, a little more about managing `GstToc`. Use `gst_toc_new()` and `gst_toc_unref()` to create/free it. `GstTocEntry` can be created using `gst_toc_entry_new()`. While building `GstToc` you can set start and stop timestamps for each item using `gst_toc_entry_set_start_stop()` and `loop_type` and `repeat_count` using `gst_toc_entry_set_loop()`. The best way to process already created `GstToc` is to recursively go through the *entries* and *subentries* fields. Applications and plugins should not rely on TOCs having a certain kind of structure, but should allow for different alternatives. For example, a simple CUE sheet embedded in a file may be presented as a flat list of track entries, or could have a top-level edition node (or some other alternative type entry) with track entries underneath that node; or even multiple top-level edition nodes (or some other alternative type entries) each with track entries underneath, in case the source file has extracted a track listing from different sources). ## TOC scope: global and current There are two main consumers for TOC information: applications and elements in the pipeline that are TOC writers (such as e.g. matroskamux). Applications typically want to know the entire table of contents (TOC) with all entries that can possibly be selected. TOC writers in the pipeline, however, would not want to write a TOC for all possible/available streams, but only for the current stream. When transcoding a title from a DVD, for example, the application would still want to know the entire TOC, with all titles, the chapters for each title, and the available angles. When transcoding to a file, we only want the TOC information that is relevant to the transcoded stream to be written into the file structure, e.g. the chapters of the title being transcoded (or possibly only chapters 5-7 if only those have been selected for playback/ transcoding). This is why we may need to create two different TOCs for those two types of consumers. Elements that extract TOC information should send TOC events downstream. Like with tags, sinks will post a TOC message on the bus for the application with the global TOC, once a global TOC event reaches the sink. ## Working with GstMessage If a table of contents is available, applications will receive a TOC message on the pipeline’s `GstBus`. A TOC message will be posted on the bus by sinks when the receive a TOC event containing a TOC with global scope. Elements extracting TOCs should not post a TOC message themselves, but send a TOC event downstream. The reason for this is that there may be cascades of TOCs (e.g. a zip archive containing multiple matroska files, each with a TOC). `GstMessage` with `GstToc` can be created using `gst_message_new_toc()` and parsed with `gst_message_parse_toc()`. The *updated* parameter in these methods indicates whether the TOC was just discovered (set to false) or TOC was already found and have been updated (set to true). This message will typically be posted by sinks to pipeline in case you have discovered TOC data within your element. ## Working with GstEvent There are two types of TOC-related events: - downstream TOC events that contain TOC information and travel downstream - toc-select events that travel upstream and can be used to select a certain TOC entry for playback (similar to seek events) `GstToc` supports select event through `GstEvent` infrastructure. The idea is the following: when you receive TOC select event, parse it with `gst_event_parse_toc_select()` and seek stream (if it is not streamable) for specified TOC UID (you can use `gst_toc_find_entry()` to find entry in TOC by UID). To create TOC select event use `gst_event_new_toc_select()`. The common action on such event is to seek to specified UID within your element. ## Implementation coverage, Specifications, … Below is a list of container formats, links to documentation and a summary of toc related features. Each section title also indicates whether reading/writing a toc is implemented. Below hollow bullet point *o* indicate no support and filled bullets *\*\* indicate that this feature is handled. ### AIFC: -/- o *MARK* o *INST* The *MARK* chunk defines a list of (cue-id, `position_in_samples`, label). The *INST* chunk contains a sustainLoop and releaseLoop, each consisting of (loop-type, cue-begin, cue-end) ### FLAC: read/write \* METADATA\_BLOCK\_CUESHEET \* CUESHEET\_TRACK o CUESHEET\_TRACK\_INDEX Both `CUESHEET_TRACK` and `CUESHEET_TRACK_INDEX` have a (relative) offset in samples. `CUESHEET_TRACK` has ISRC metadata. ### MKV: read/write \* Chapters and Editions each having a uid \* Chapter have start/end time and metadata: ChapString, ChapLanguage, ChapCountry ### MP4: \* elst The *elst* atom contains a list of edits. Each edit consists of (length, start, play-back speed). ### OGG: -/- o VorbisComment fields called CHAPTERxxx and CHAPTERxxxNAME with xxx being a number between 000 and 999. ### WAV: read/write \* *cue ' o 'plst* \* *adtl* \* *labl* \* *note* o *ltxt* o *smpl* The `*cue` chunk defines a list of markers in the stream with `cue-id`s. The `smpl*` chunk defines a list of regions in the stream with `cue-id`s in the same namespace (?). The various *adtl* chunks: *labl*, *note* and *ltxt* refer to the 'cue-id’s. A *plst* chunk defines a sequence of segments (`cue-id`, `length_samples`, repeats). The *smpl* chunk defines a list of loops (`cue-id`, `beg`, `end`, `loop-type`, `repeats`). ## Conclusion/Ideas/Future work Based on the data of chapter 5, a few thoughts and observations that can be used to extend and refine our API. These things below are not reflecting the current implementation. All formats have table of `[cue-id, cue-start, (cue-end), (extra tags)]` - `cue-id` is commonly represented as and unsigned int 32bit - `cue-end` is optional. Extra tags could be represented as a structure/taglist Many formats have metadata that references the cue-table. - loops in instruments in wav, aifc - edit lists in wav, mp4 For mp4.edtl, wav.plst we could expose two editions. 1) the edit list is flattened: default, for playback 2) the stream has the raw data and the edit list is there as chapter markers: useful for editing software We might want to introduce a new `GST_TOC_ENTRY_TYPE_MARKER` or `_CUE`. This would be a sequence entry-type and it would not be used for navigational purposes, but to attach data to a point in time (envelopes, loops, …). API wise there is some overlap between: - exposing multiple audio/video tracks as pads or as ToC editions. For ToC editions, we have the TocSelect event. - exposing subtitles as a sparse stream or as as ToC sequence of markers with labels