Getting Started
The dparams subsystem is contained within the gstcontrol library.
You need to include the header in your element's source file:
#include <gst/control/control.h>
Even though the gstcontrol library may be linked into the host
application, you should make sure it is loaded in your plugin_init
function:
static gboolean
plugin_init (GModule *module, GstPlugin *plugin)
{
...
/* load dparam support library */
if (!gst_library_load ("gstcontrol"))
{
gst_info ("example: could not load support library: 'gstcontrol'\n");
return FALSE;
}
...
}
You need to store an instance of GstDParamManager in your element's struct:
struct _GstExample {
GstElement element;
...
GstDParamManager *dpman;
...
};
The GstDParamManager can be initialised in your element's
init function:
static void
gst_example_init (GstExample *example)
{
...
example->dpman = gst_dpman_new ("example_dpman", GST_ELEMENT(example));
...
}
Defining Parameter Specificiations
You can define the dparams you need anywhere within your element but will usually
need to do so in only a couple of places:
In the element init function,
just after the call to gst_dpman_new
Whenever a new pad is created so that parameters can affect data going into
or out of a specific pad. An example of this would be a mixer element where
a seperate volume parameter is needed on every pad.
There are three different ways the dparams subsystem can pass parameters into your element.
Which one you use will depend on how that parameter is used within your element.
Each of these methods has its own function to define a required dparam:
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_direct
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_callback
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_array
These functions will return TRUE if the required dparam was added successfully.
The following function will be used as an example.
gboolean
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_direct (GstDParamManager *dpman,
GParamSpec *param_spec,
gboolean is_log,
gboolean is_rate,
gpointer update_data)
The common parameters to these functions are:
GstDParamManager *dpman the element's dparam manager
GParamSpec *param_spec the param spec which defines the required dparam
gboolean is_log whether this dparam value should be
interpreted on a log scale (such as a frequency or a decibel value)
gboolean is_rate whether this dparam value is a proportion of the
sample rate. For example with a sample rate of 44100, 0.5 would be 22050 Hz and 0.25 would be 11025 Hz.
Direct Method
This method is the simplest and has the lowest overhead for parameters which change
less frequently than the sample rate. First you need somewhere to store the parameter -
this will usually be in your element's stuct.
struct _GstExample {
GstElement element;
...
GstDParamManager *dpman;
gfloat volume;
...
};
Then to define the required dparam just call gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_direct
and pass in the location of the parameter to change.
In this case the location is &(example->volume).
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_direct (
example->dpman,
g_param_spec_float("volume","Volume","Volume of the audio",
0.0, 1.0, 0.8, G_PARAM_READWRITE),
FALSE,
FALSE,
&(example->volume)
);
You can now use example->volume anywhere in your element knowing
that it will always contain the correct value to use.
Callback Method
This should be used if the you have other values to calculate whenever a parameter changes.
If you used the direct method you wouldn't know if a parameter had changed so you would have to
recalculate the other values every time you needed them. By using the callback method, other values
only have to be recalculated when the dparam value actually changes.
The following code illustrates an instance where you might want to use the callback method.
If you had a volume dparam which was represented by a gfloat number, your element may only deal
with integer arithmatic. The callback could be used to calculate the integer scaler when the volume
changes. First you will need somewhere to store these values.
struct _GstExample {
GstElement element;
...
GstDParamManager *dpman;
gfloat volume_f;
gint volume_i;
...
};
When the required dparam is defined, the callback function gst_example_update_volume
and some user data (which in this case is our element instance) is passed in to the call to
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_callback.
gst_dpman_add_required_dparam_callback (
example->dpman,
g_param_spec_float("volume","Volume","Volume of the audio",
0.0, 1.0, 0.8, G_PARAM_READWRITE),
FALSE,
FALSE,
gst_example_update_volume,
example
);
The callback function needs to conform to this signiture
typedef void (*GstDPMUpdateFunction) (GValue *value, gpointer data);
In our example the callback function looks like this
static void
gst_example_update_volume(GValue *value, gpointer data)
{
GstExample *example = (GstExample*)data;
g_return_if_fail(GST_IS_EXAMPLE(example));
example->volume_f = g_value_get_float(value);
example->volume_i = example->volume_f * 8192;
}
Now example->volume_i can be used elsewhere and it will always contain the correct value.
Array Method
This method is quite different from the other two. It could be thought of as
a specialised method which should only be used if you need the advantages that it
provides. Instead of giving the element a single value it provides an array of values
where each item in the array corresponds to a sample of audio in your buffer.
There are a couple of reasons why this might be useful.
Certain optimisations may be possible since you can iterate over your dparams array
and your buffer data together.
Some dparams may be able to interpolate changing values at the sample rate. This would allow
the array to contain very smoothly changing values which may be required for the stability
and quality of some DSP algorithms.
The array method is currently the least mature of the three methods and is not yet ready to be
used in elements, but plugin writers should be aware of its existance for the future.
The Data Processing Loop
This is the most critical aspect of the dparams subsystem as it relates to elements.
In a traditional audio processing loop, a for loop will usually iterate over each
sample in the buffer, processing one sample at a time until the buffer is finished.
A simplified loop with no error checking might look something like this.
static void
example_chain (GstPad *pad, GstBuffer *buf)
{
...
gfloat *float_data;
int j;
GstExample *example = GST_EXAMPLE(GST_OBJECT_PARENT (pad));
int num_samples = GST_BUFFER_SIZE(buf)/sizeof(gfloat);
float_data = (gfloat *)GST_BUFFER_DATA(buf);
...
for (j = 0; j < num_samples; j++) {
float_data[j] *= example->volume;
}
...
}
To make this dparams aware, a couple of changes are needed.
static void
example_chain (GstPad *pad, GstBuffer *buf)
{
...
int j = 0;
GstExample *example = GST_EXAMPLE(GST_OBJECT_PARENT (pad));
int num_samples = GST_BUFFER_SIZE(buf)/sizeof(gfloat);
gfloat *float_data = (gfloat *)GST_BUFFER_DATA(buf);
int frame_countdown = GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS(example->dpman, num_samples, GST_BUFFER_TIMESTAMP(buf));
...
while (GST_DPMAN_PROCESS_COUNTDOWN(example->dpman, frame_countdown, j)) {
float_data[j++] *= example->volume;
}
...
}
The biggest changes here are 2 new macros, GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS
and GST_DPMAN_PROCESS_COUNTDOWN.
You will also notice that the for loop has become a while loop. GST_DPMAN_PROCESS_COUNTDOWN
is called as the condition for the while loop so that any required dparams can be updated in the
middle of a buffer if required. This is because one of the required behaviours of dparams is that they
can be sample accurate. This means that parameters change at the exact timestamp
that they are supposed to - not after the buffer has finished being processed.
It may be alarming to see a macro as the condition for a while loop, but it is actually very efficient.
The macro expands to the following.
#define GST_DPMAN_PROCESS_COUNTDOWN(dpman, frame_countdown, frame_count) \
(frame_countdown-- || \
(frame_countdown = GST_DPMAN_PROCESS(dpman, frame_count)))
So as long as frame_countdown is greater than 0, GST_DPMAN_PROCESS
will not be called at all.
Also in many cases, GST_DPMAN_PROCESS will do nothing and simply
return 0, meaning that there is no more data in the buffer to process.
The macro GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS will do the following:
Update any dparams which are due to be updated.
Calculate how many samples should be processed before the next required update
Return the number of samples until next update, or the number of samples in the buffer -
whichever is less.
In fact GST_DPMAN_PROCESS may do the same things as GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS
depending on the mode that the dparam manager is running in (see below).
DParam Manager Modes
A brief explanation of dparam manager modes might be useful here even though it doesn't generally affect
the way your element is written. There are different ways media applications will be used which
require that an element's parameters be updated in differently. These include:
Timelined - all parameter changes are known in advance before the pipeline is run.
Realtime low-latency - Nothing is known ahead of time about when a parameter
might change. Changes need to be propagated to the element as soon as possible.
When a dparam-aware application gets the dparam manager for an element, the first thing it will do
is set the dparam manager mode. Current modes are "synchronous"
and "asynchronous".
If you are in a realtime low-latency situation then the "synchronous" mode is appropriate.
During GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS this mode will poll all dparams for required updates
and propagate them. GST_DPMAN_PROCESS will do nothing in this mode.
To then achieve the desired latency, the size of the buffers needs to be reduced so that the dparams will be
polled for updates at the desired frequency.
In a timelined situation, the "asynchronous" mode will be required. This mode
hasn't actually been implemented yet but will be described anyway.
The GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS call will precalculate when and how often each dparam needs
to update for the duration of the current buffer. From then on GST_DPMAN_PROCESS will
propagate the calculated updates each time it is called until end of the buffer. If the application is rendering
to disk in non-realtime, the render could be sped up by increasing the buffer size. In the "asynchronous"
mode this could be done without affecting the sample accuracy of the parameter updates
DParam Manager Modes
All of the explanation so far has presumed that the buffer contains audio data with many samples.
Video should be regarded differently since a video buffer often contains only 1 frame. In this case
some of the complexity of dparams isn't required but the other benefits still make it useful for video
parameters. If a buffer only contains one frame of video, only a single call to GST_DPMAN_PREPROCESS
should be required. For more than one frame per buffer, treat it the same as the audio case.