Events: Seeking, Navigation and More
There are many different event types but only two ways they can travel in
the pipeline: downstream or upstream. It is very important to understand
how both of these methods work because if one element in the pipeline is not
handling them correctly the whole event system of the pipeline is broken.
We will try to explain here how these methods work and how elements are
supposed to implement them.
Downstream events
Downstream events are received through the sink pad's event handler,
as set using gst_pad_set_event_function () when
the pad was created.
Downstream events can travel in two ways: they can be in-band (serialised
with the buffer flow) or out-of-band (travelling through the pipeline
instantly, possibly not in the same thread as the streaming thread that
is processing the buffers, skipping ahead of buffers being processed
or queued in the pipeline). The most common downstream events
(SEGMENT, CAPS, TAG, EOS) are all serialised with the buffer flow.
Here is a typical event function:
static gboolean
gst_my_filter_sink_event (GstPad *pad, GstObject * parent, GstEvent * event)
{
GstMyFilter *filter;
gboolean ret;
filter = GST_MY_FILTER (parent);
...
switch (GST_EVENT_TYPE (event)) {
case GST_EVENT_SEGMENT:
/* maybe save and/or update the current segment (e.g. for output
* clipping) or convert the event into one in a different format
* (e.g. BYTES to TIME) or drop it and set a flag to send a segment
* event in a different format later */
ret = gst_pad_push_event (filter->src_pad, event);
break;
case GST_EVENT_EOS:
/* end-of-stream, we should close down all stream leftovers here */
gst_my_filter_stop_processing (filter);
ret = gst_pad_push_event (filter->src_pad, event);
break;
case GST_EVENT_FLUSH_STOP:
gst_my_filter_clear_temporary_buffers (filter);
ret = gst_pad_push_event (filter->src_pad, event);
break;
default:
ret = gst_pad_event_default (pad, parent, event);
break;
}
...
return ret;
}
If your element is chain-based, you will almost always have to implement
a sink event function, since that is how you are notified about
segments, caps and the end of the stream.
If your element is exclusively loop-based, you may or may not want a
sink event function (since the element is driving the pipeline it will
know the length of the stream in advance or be notified by the flow
return value of gst_pad_pull_range(). In some cases
even loop-based element may receive events from upstream though (for
example audio decoders with an id3demux or apedemux element in front of
them, or demuxers that are being fed input from sources that send
additional information about the stream in custom events, as DVD sources
do).
Upstream events
Upstream events are generated by an element somewhere downstream in
the pipeline (example: a video sink may generate navigation
events that informs upstream elements about the current position of
the mouse pointer). This may also happen indirectly on request of the
application, for example when the application executes a seek on a
pipeline this seek request will be passed on to a sink element which
will then in turn generate an upstream seek event.
The most common upstream events are seek events, Quality-of-Service
(QoS) and reconfigure events.
An upstream event can be sent using the
gst_pad_send_event function. This
function simply call the default event handler of that pad. The default
event handler of pads is gst_pad_event_default, and
it basically sends the event to the peer of the internally linked pad.
So upstream events always arrive on the src pad of your element and are
handled by the default event handler except if you override that handler
to handle it yourself. There are some specific cases where you have to
do that :
If you have multiple sink pads in your element. In that case you will
have to decide which one of the sink pads you will send the event to
(if not all of them).
If you need to handle that event locally. For example a navigation
event that you will want to convert before sending it upstream, or
a QoS event that you want to handle.
The processing you will do in that event handler does not really matter
but there are important rules you have to absolutely respect because
one broken element event handler is breaking the whole pipeline event
handling. Here they are :
Always handle events you won't handle using the default
gst_pad_event_default method. This method will
depending on the event, forward the event or drop it.
If you are generating some new event based on the one you received
don't forget to gst_event_unref the event you received.
Event handler function are supposed to return TRUE or FALSE indicating
if the event has been handled or not. Never simply return TRUE/FALSE
in that handler except if you really know that you have handled that
event.
Remember that the event handler might be called from a different
thread than the streaming thread, so make sure you use
appropriate locking everywhere.
All Events Together
In this chapter follows a list of all defined events that are currently
being used, plus how they should be used/interpreted. You can check the
what type a certain event is using the GST_EVENT_TYPE macro (or if you
need a string for debugging purposes you can use GST_EVENT_TYPE_NAME).
In this chapter, we will discuss the following events:
For more comprehensive information about events and how they should be
used correctly in various circumstances please consult the GStreamer
design documentation. This section only gives a general overview.
Stream Start
WRITEME
Caps
WRITEME
Segment
A segment event is sent downstream to announce the range of valid
timestamps in the stream and how they should be transformed into
running-time and stream-time. A segment event must always be sent
before the first buffer of data and after a flush (see above).
The first segment event is created by the element driving the
pipeline, like a source operating in push-mode or a demuxer/decoder
operating pull-based. This segment event then travels down the
pipeline and may be transformed on the way (a decoder, for example,
might receive a segment event in BYTES format and might transform
this into a segment event in TIMES format based on the average
bitrate).
Depending on the element type, the event can simply be forwarded using
gst_pad_event_default (), or it should be parsed
and a modified event should be sent on. The last is true for demuxers,
which generally have a byte-to-time conversion concept. Their input
is usually byte-based, so the incoming event will have an offset in
byte units (GST_FORMAT_BYTES), too. Elements
downstream, however, expect segment events in time units, so that
it can be used to synchronize against the pipeline clock. Therefore,
demuxers and similar elements should not forward the event, but parse
it, free it and send a segment event (in time units,
GST_FORMAT_TIME) further downstream.
The segment event is created using the function
gst_event_new_segment (). See the API
reference and design document for details about its parameters.
Elements parsing this event can use gst_event_parse_segment()
to extract the event details. Elements may find the GstSegment
API useful to keep track of the current segment (if they want to use
it for output clipping, for example).
Tag (metadata)
Tagging events are being sent downstream to indicate the tags as parsed
from the stream data. This is currently used to preserve tags during
stream transcoding from one format to the other. Tags are discussed
extensively in . Most
elements will simply forward the event by calling
gst_pad_event_default ().
The tag event is created using the function
gst_event_new_tag (), but more often elements will
send a tag event downstream that will be converted into a message
on the bus by sink elements.
All of these functions require a filled-in taglist as
argument, which they will take ownership of.
Elements parsing this event can use the function
gst_event_parse_tag () to acquire the
taglist that the event contains.
End of Stream (EOS)
End-of-stream events are sent if the stream that an element sends out
is finished. An element receiving this event (from upstream, so it
receives it on its sinkpad) will generally just process any buffered
data (if there is any) and then forward the event further downstream.
The gst_pad_event_default () takes care of all
this, so most elements do not need to support this event. Exceptions are
elements that explicitly need to close a resource down on EOS, and
N-to-1 elements. Note that the stream itself is not
a resource that should be closed down on EOS! Applications might seek
back to a point before EOS and continue playing again.
The EOS event has no properties, which makes it one of the simplest
events in &GStreamer;. It is created using the
gst_event_new_eos() function.
It is important to note that only elements driving the
pipeline should ever send an EOS event. If your element
is chain-based, it is not driving the pipeline. Chain-based elements
should just return GST_FLOW_EOS from their chain function at
the end of the stream (or the configured segment), the upstream
element that is driving the pipeline will then take care of
sending the EOS event (or alternatively post a SEGMENT_DONE message
on the bus depending on the mode of operation). If you are implementing
your own source element, you also do not need to ever manually send
an EOS event, you should also just return GST_FLOW_EOS in
your create or fill function (assuming your element derives from
GstBaseSrc or GstPushSrc).
Table Of Contents
WRITEME
Gap
WRITEME
Flush Start
The flush start event is sent downstream (in push mode) or upstream
(in pull mode) if all buffers and caches in the pipeline should be
emptied. Queue
elements will
empty their internal list of buffers when they receive this event, for
example. File sink elements (e.g. filesink
) will flush
the kernel-to-disk cache (fdatasync () or
fflush ()) when they receive this event. Normally,
elements receiving this event will simply just forward it, since most
filter or filter-like elements don't have an internal cache of data.
gst_pad_event_default () does just that, so for
most elements, it is enough to forward the event using the default
event handler.
As a side-effect of flushing all data from the pipeline, this event
unblocks the streaming thread by making all pads reject data until
they receive a signal
(elements trying to push data will get a FLUSHING flow return
and stop processing data).
The flush-start event is created with the
gst_event_new_flush_start ().
Like the EOS event, it has no properties. This event is usually
only created by elements driving the pipeline, like source elements
operating in push-mode or pull-range based demuxers/decoders.
Flush Stop
The flush-stop event is sent by an element driving the pipeline
after a flush-start and tells pads and elements downstream that
they should accept events and buffers again (there will be at
least a SEGMENT event before any buffers first though).
If your element keeps temporary caches of stream data, it should
clear them when it receives a FLUSH-STOP event (and also whenever
its chain function receives a buffer with the DISCONT flag set).
The flush-stop event is created with
gst_event_new_flush_stop (). It has one
parameter that controls if the running-time of the pipeline should
be reset to 0 or not. Normally aftera flushing seek, the
running_time is set back to 0.
Quality Of Service (QOS)
WRITEME
Seek Request
Seek events are meant to request a new stream position to elements.
This new position can be set in several formats (time, bytes or
default units
[a term indicating frames for video,
channel-independent samples for audio, etc.]). Seeking can be done with
respect to the end-of-file or start-of-file, and
usually happens in upstream direction (downstream seeking is done by
sending a SEGMENT event with the appropriate offsets for elements
that support that, like filesink).
Elements receiving seek events should, depending on the element type,
either just forward it upstream (filters, decoders), change the
format in which the event is given and then forward it (demuxers),
or handle the event by changing the file pointer in their internal
stream resource (file sources, demuxers/decoders driving the pipeline
in pull-mode) or something else.
Seek events are built up using positions in specified formats (time,
bytes, units). They are created using the function
gst_event_new_seek (). Note that many plugins do
not support seeking from the end of the stream.
An element not driving the pipeline and forwarding a seek
request should not assume that the seek succeeded or actually happened,
it should operate based on the SEGMENT events it receives.
Elements parsing this event can do this using
gst_event_parse_seek().
Navigation
Navigation events are sent upstream by video sinks to inform upstream
elements of where the mouse pointer is, if and where mouse pointer
clicks have happened, or if keys have been pressed or released.
All this information is contained in the event structure which can
be obtained with gst_event_get_structure ().
Check out the navigationtest element in gst-plugins-good for an idea
how to extract navigation information from this event.