Bins
A bin is a container element. You can add elements to a bin. Since a
bin is an element itself, a bin can be handled in the same way as any
other element. Therefore, the whole previous chapter () applies to bins as well.
What are bins
Bins allow you to combine a group of linked elements into one
logical element. You do not deal with the individual elements
anymore but with just one element, the bin. We will see that
this is extremely powerful when you are going to construct
complex pipelines since it allows you to break up the pipeline
in smaller chunks.
The bin will also manage the elements contained in it. It will
figure out how the data will flow in the bin and generate an
optimal plan for that data flow. Plan generation is one of the
most complicated procedures in &GStreamer;. You will learn more
about this process, called scheduling, in .
There is one specialized type of bin available to the
&GStreamer; programmer:
A pipeline: a generic container that allows scheduling of the
containing elements. The toplevel bin has to be a pipeline,
every application thus needs at least one of these. Pipelines will
automatically run themselves in a background thread when started.
Creating a bin
Bins are created in the same way that other elements are created,
i.e. using an element factory. There are also convenience functions
available (gst_bin_new () and
gst_pipeline_new ()).
To add elements to a bin or remove elements from a
bin, you can use gst_bin_add () and
gst_bin_remove (). Note that the bin that you
add an element to will take ownership of that element. If you
destroy the bin, the element will be dereferenced with it. If you
remove an element from a bin, it will be dereferenced automatically.
#include <gst/gst.h>
int
main (int argc,
char *argv[])
{
GstElement *bin, *pipeline, *source, *sink;
/* init */
gst_init (&argc, &argv);
/* create */
pipeline = gst_pipeline_new ("my_pipeline");
bin = gst_bin_new ("my_bin");
source = gst_element_factory_make ("fakesrc", "source");
sink = gst_element_factory_make ("fakesink", "sink");
/* First add the elements to the bin */
gst_bin_add_many (GST_BIN (bin), source, sink, NULL);
/* add the bin to the pipeline */
gst_bin_add (GST_BIN (pipeline), bin);
/* link the elements */
gst_element_link (source, sink);
[..]
}
There are various functions to lookup elements in a bin. You can
also get a list of all elements that a bin contains using the function
gst_bin_get_list (). See the API references of
GstBin
for details.
Custom bins
The application programmer can create custom bins packed with elements
to perform a specific task. This allows you, for example, to write
an Ogg/Vorbis decoder with just the following lines of code:
int
main (int argc,
char *argv[])
{
GstElement *player;
/* init */
gst_init (&argc, &argv);
/* create player */
player = gst_element_factory_make ("oggvorbisplayer", "player");
/* set the source audio file */
g_object_set (player, "location", "helloworld.ogg", NULL);
/* start playback */
gst_element_set_state (GST_ELEMENT (player), GST_STATE_PLAYING);
[..]
}
(This is a silly example of course, there already exists a much more
powerful and versatile custom bin like this: the playbin2 element.)
Custom bins can be created with a plugin or an XML description. You
will find more information about creating custom bin in the Plugin
Writers Guide.
Examples of such custom bins are the playbin2 and uridecodebin elements from
gst-plugins-base.
Bins manage states of their children
Bins manage the state of all elements contained in them. If you set
a bin (or a pipeline, which is a special top-level type of bin) to
a certain target state using gst_element_set_state (),
it will make sure all elements contained within it will also be set
to this state. This means it's usually only necessary to set the state
of the top-level pipeline to start up the pipeline or shut it down.
Note, however, that if elements are added to a bin or pipeline that's
already running, , e.g. from within a "pad-added" or "new-decoded-pad"
signal callback, its state will not automatically be brought in line with
the current state or target state of the bin or pipeline it was added to.
Instead, you have to need to set it to the desired target state yourself
using gst_element_set_state () or
gst_element_sync_state_with_parent () when adding
elements to an already-running pipeline.