--- title: Configuration short-description: GstValidate configuration ... # GstValidate Configuration GstValidate comes with some possible configuration files to setup its plugins and core behaviour. The config format is very similar to the [scenario](gst-validate-scenarios.md) file format. You can check the [ssim plugin](plugins/ssim.md) and the [validate flow plugin](gst-validate-flow.md) for examples. ## Core settings parameters Config name should be `core`. ### `verbosity` Default: `position` See [GstValidateVerbosityFlags](GstValidateVerbosityFlags) for possible values. ### `action` The [action type](gst-validate-action-types.md) to execute, the action type must be a CONFIG action or the action type must have a `as-config` argument. When the `action` is specified in a parameter, a validate action is executed using the other parameters of the config as configuration for the validate scenario action. #### Example: ``` GST_VALIDATE_CONFIG="core, action=set-property, target-element-name="videotestsrc0", property-name=pattern, property-value=blue" gst-validate-1.0 videotestsrc ! autovideosink ``` This will execute the `set-property, target-element-name="videotestsrc0", property-name=pattern, property-value=blue` validate action directly from the config file ### `scenario-action-execution-interval` Default: `0` meaning that action are executed in `idle` callbacks. Set the interval between [GstValidateScenario](gst-validate-scenarios.md) actions execution. ### `max-latency` Default: `GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE` - disabled Set the maximum latency reported by the pipeline, over that defined latency the scenario will report an `config::latency-too-high` issue. ### `max-dropped` Default: `GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE` - disabled The maximum number of dropped buffers, a `config::too-many-buffers-dropped` issue will be reported if that limit is reached. ### `fail-on-missing-plugin` Default: `false` meaning that tests are marked as skipped when a GStreamer plugin is missing. ## Variables You can use variables in the configs the same way you can set them in [gst-validate-scenarios](gst-validate-scenarios.md). Defaults variables are: - `$(TMPDIR)`: The default temporary directory as returned by `g_get_tmp_dir`. - `$(CONFIG_PATH)`: The path of the running scenario. - `$(CONFIG_DIR)`: The directory the running scenario is in. - `$(CONFIG_NAME)`: The name of the config file - `$(LOGSDIR)`: The directory where to place log files. This uses the `GST_VALIDATE_LOGSDIR` environment variable if available or `$(TMPDIR)` if the variables hasn't been set. (Note that the [gst-validate-launcher](gst-validate-launcher.md) set the environment variables). You can also set you own variables by using the `set-vars=true` argument: ``` yaml core, set-vars=true, log-path=$(CONFIG_DIR/../log) ``` It is also possible to set global variables (also usable from [scenarios](gst-validate-scenarios.md)) with: ``` yaml set-globals, TESTSUITE_ROOT_DIR=$(CONFIG_DIR) ``` ## `change-issue-severity` settings parameters You can change issues severity with the `change-issue-severity` configuration with the following parameters: * `issue-id`: The GQuark name of the issue, for example: `event::segment-has-wrong-start`, You can use `gst-validate-1.0 --print-issue-types` to list all issue types. * `new-severity`: The new [`severity`](GstValidateReportLevel) of the issue * `element-name` (*optional*): The name of the element the severity change applies to * `element-factory-name` (*optional*): The element factory name of the elements the severity change applies to * `element-classification` (*optional*): The classification of the elements the severity change applies to