GStreamer 1.24 Release Notes

GStreamer 1.24 has not been released yet. It is scheduled for release ASAP.

GStreamer 1.23.2 is the current API unstable development snapshot that is being developed in the git main branch which will
eventually become the upcoming GStreamer 1.24 stable release.

1.24 will be backwards-compatible to the stable 1.22, 1.20, 1.18, 1.16, 1.14, 1.12, 1.10, 1.8, 1.6,, 1.4, 1.2 and 1.0 release
series.

Introduction

The GStreamer team is proud to announce a new major feature release in the stable 1.x API series of your favourite
cross-platform multimedia framework!

As always, this release is again packed with many new features, bug fixes and other improvements.

Highlights

-   This section will be completed in due course

Major new features and changes

-   This section will be completed in due course

New elements and plugins

-   This section will be completed in due course

New element features and additions

-   This section will be completed in due course

Plugin and library moves

-   This section will be completed in due course

Plugin removals

-   This section will be completed in due course

Miscellaneous API additions

-   This section will be completed in due course

Miscellaneous performance, latency and memory optimisations

-   This section will be completed in due course

-   liborc 0.4.35 (latest: 0.4.37) adds support for AVX/AVX2 and contains improvements for the SSE backend.

-   as always there have been plenty of performance, latency and memory optimisations all over the place.

Miscellaneous other changes and enhancements

-   This section will be completed in due course

Tracing framework and debugging improvements

New tracers

-   This section will be completed in due course

Debug logging system improvements

-   This section will be completed in due course

Tools

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer FFMPEG wrapper

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer RTSP server

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer VA-API support

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer Video4Linux2 support

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer OMX

-   The gst-omx module has been removed. The OpenMAX standard is long dead and even the Raspberry Pi OS no longer supports it.
    There has not been any development since 1.22 was released. Users of these elements should switch to the Video4Linux-based
    video encoders and decoders which have been the standard on embedded Linux for quite some time now.

GStreamer Editing Services and NLE

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer validate

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer Python Bindings

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer C# Bindings

-   This section will be completed in due course

GStreamer Rust Bindings and Rust Plugins

The GStreamer Rust bindings are released separately with a different release cadence that’s tied to gtk-rs, but the latest
release has already been updated for the new GStreamer 1.24 API.

gst-plugins-rs, the module containing GStreamer plugins written in Rust, has also seen lots of activity with many new elements
and plugins

-   Rust plugins can be used from any programming language. To the outside they look just like a plugin written in C or C++.

New Rust plugins and elements

-   This section will be completed in due course

Cerbero Rust support

-   This section will be completed in due course

Build and Dependencies

-   This section will be completed in due course

Monorepo build (neé gst-build)

-   This section will be completed in due course

Cerbero

Cerbero is a meta build system used to build GStreamer plus dependencies on platforms where dependencies are not readily
available, such as Windows, Android, iOS, and macOS.

General improvements

-   This section will be completed in due course

macOS / iOS

-   This section will be completed in due course

Windows

-   This section will be completed in due course

Linux

-   This section will be completed in due course

Android

-   This section will be completed in due course

Platform-specific changes and improvements

Android

-   This section will be completed in due course

Apple macOS and iOS

-   This section will be completed in due course

Windows

-   This section will be completed in due course

Linux

-   This section will be completed in due course

Documentation improvements

-   This section will be completed in due course

Possibly Breaking Changes

-   This section will be completed in due course

Known Issues

-   This section will be completed in due course

Statistics

-   This section will be completed in due course

Contributors

-   This section will be completed in due course

Stable 1.24 branch

After the 1.24.0 release there will be several 1.24.x bug-fix releases which will contain bug fixes which have been deemed
suitable for a stable branch, but no new features or intrusive changes will be added to a bug-fix release usually. The 1.24.x
bug-fix releases will be made from the git 1.24 branch, which will be a stable branch.

1.24.0

1.24.0 has not yet been released.

Schedule for 1.26

Our next major feature release will be 1.26, and 1.25 will be the unstable development version leading up to the stable 1.26
release. The development of 1.25/1.25 will happen in the git main branch of the GStreamer mono repository.

The schedule for 1.26 is yet to be confirmed. We’re still busy getting 1.24 out!

1.26 will be backwards-compatible to the stable 1.24, 1.22, 1.20, 1.18, 1.16, 1.14, 1.12, 1.10, 1.8, 1.6, 1.4, 1.2 and 1.0
release series.

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These release notes have been prepared by Tim-Philipp Müller.

License: CC BY-SA 4.0