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177 lines
6.4 KiB
XML
177 lines
6.4 KiB
XML
<chapter id="chapter-metadata">
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<title>Metadata</title>
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<para>
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&GStreamer; makes a clear distinction between two types of metadata, and
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has support for both types. The first is stream tags, which describe the
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content of a stream in a non-technical way. Examples include the author
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of a song, the title of that very same song or the album it is a part of.
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The other type of metadata is stream-info, which is a somewhat technical
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description of the properties of a stream. This can include video size,
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audio samplerate, codecs used and so on. Tags are handled using the
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&GStreamer; tagging system. Stream-info can be retrieved from a
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<classname>GstPad</classname>.
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</para>
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<sect1 id="section-tags-read">
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<title>Metadata reading</title>
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<para>
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Stream information can most easily be read by reading it from a
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<classname>GstPad</classname>. This has already been discussed before
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in <xref linkend="section-caps-metadata"/>. Therefore, we will skip
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it here. Note that this requires access to all pads of which you
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want stream information.
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</para>
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<para>
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Tag reading is done through a bus in &GStreamer;, which has been
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discussed previously in <xref linkend="chapter-bus"/>. You can
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listen for <classname>GST_MESSAGE_TAG</classname> messages and handle
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them as you wish.
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</para>
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<para>
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Note, however, that the <classname>GST_MESSAGE_TAG</classname>
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message may be fired multiple times in the pipeline. It is the
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application's responsibility to put all those tags together and
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display them to the user in a nice, coherent way. Usually, using
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<function>gst_tag_list_merge ()</function> is a good enough way
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of doing this; make sure to empty the cache when loading a new song,
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or after every few minutes when listening to internet radio. Also,
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make sure you use <classname>GST_TAG_MERGE_PREPEND</classname> as
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merging mode, so that a new title (which came in later) has a
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preference over the old one for display.
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</para>
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<para>
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The following example will extract tags from a file and print them:
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</para>
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<programlisting>
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/* compile with:
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* gcc -o tags tags.c `pkg-config --cflags --libs gstreamer-1.0` */
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#include <gst/gst.h>
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static void
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print_one_tag (const GstTagList * list, const gchar * tag, gpointer user_data)
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{
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int i, num;
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num = gst_tag_list_get_tag_size (list, tag);
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for (i = 0; i < num; ++i) {
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const GValue *val;
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/* Note: when looking for specific tags, use the g_tag_list_get_xyz() API,
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* we only use the GValue approach here because it is more generic */
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val = gst_tag_list_get_value_index (list, tag, i);
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if (G_VALUE_HOLDS_STRING (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : %s\n", tag, g_value_get_string (val));
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} else if (G_VALUE_HOLDS_UINT (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : %u\n", tag, g_value_get_uint (val));
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} else if (G_VALUE_HOLDS_DOUBLE (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : %g\n", tag, g_value_get_double (val));
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} else if (G_VALUE_HOLDS_BOOLEAN (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : %s\n", tag,
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(g_value_get_boolean (val)) ? "true" : "false");
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} else if (GST_VALUE_HOLDS_BUFFER (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : buffer of size %u\n", tag,
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GST_BUFFER_SIZE (gst_value_get_buffer (val)));
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} else if (GST_VALUE_HOLDS_DATE (val)) {
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g_print ("\t%20s : date (year=%u,...)\n", tag,
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g_date_get_year (gst_value_get_date (val)));
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} else {
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g_print ("\t%20s : tag of type '%s'\n", tag, G_VALUE_TYPE_NAME (val));
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}
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}
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}
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static void
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on_new_pad (GstElement * dec, GstPad * pad, GstElement * fakesink)
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{
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GstPad *sinkpad;
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sinkpad = gst_element_get_static_pad (fakesink, "sink");
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if (!gst_pad_is_linked (sinkpad)) {
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if (gst_pad_link (pad, sinkpad) != GST_PAD_LINK_OK)
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g_error ("Failed to link pads!");
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}
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gst_object_unref (sinkpad);
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}
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int
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main (int argc, char ** argv)
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{
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GstElement *pipe, *dec, *sink;
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GstMessage *msg;
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gst_init (&argc, &argv);
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if (argc < 2 || !gst_uri_is_valid (argv[1]))
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g_error ("Usage: %s file:///path/to/file", argv[0]);
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pipe = gst_pipeline_new ("pipeline");
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dec = gst_element_factory_make ("uridecodebin", NULL);
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g_object_set (dec, "uri", argv[1], NULL);
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gst_bin_add (GST_BIN (pipe), dec);
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sink = gst_element_factory_make ("fakesink", NULL);
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gst_bin_add (GST_BIN (pipe), sink);
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g_signal_connect (dec, "pad-added", G_CALLBACK (on_new_pad), sink);
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gst_element_set_state (pipe, GST_STATE_PAUSED);
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while (TRUE) {
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GstTagList *tags = NULL;
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msg = gst_bus_timed_pop_filtered (GST_ELEMENT_BUS (pipe),
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GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE,
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GST_MESSAGE_ASYNC_DONE | GST_MESSAGE_TAG | GST_MESSAGE_ERROR);
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if (GST_MESSAGE_TYPE (msg) != GST_MESSAGE_TAG) /* error or async_done */
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break;
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gst_message_parse_tag (msg, &tags);
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g_print ("Got tags from element %s:\n", GST_OBJECT_NAME (msg->src));
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gst_tag_list_foreach (tags, print_one_tag, NULL);
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g_print ("\n");
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gst_tag_list_unref (tags);
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gst_message_unref (msg);
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};
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if (GST_MESSAGE_TYPE (msg) == GST_MESSAGE_ERROR)
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g_error ("Got error");
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gst_message_unref (msg);
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gst_element_set_state (pipe, GST_STATE_NULL);
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gst_object_unref (pipe);
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return 0;
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}
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</programlisting>
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</sect1>
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<sect1 id="section-tags-write">
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<title>Tag writing</title>
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<para>
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Tag writing is done using the <ulink type="http"
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url="&URLAPI;GstTagSetter.html"><classname>GstTagSetter</classname></ulink>
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interface. All that's required is a tag-set-supporting element in
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your pipeline. In order to see if any of the elements in your
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pipeline supports tag writing, you can use the function
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<function>gst_bin_iterate_all_by_interface (pipeline,
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GST_TYPE_TAG_SETTER)</function>. On the resulting element, usually
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an encoder or muxer, you can use <function>gst_tag_setter_merge
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()</function> (with a taglist) or <function>gst_tag_setter_add
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()</function> (with individual tags) to set tags on it.
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</para>
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<para>
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A nice extra feature in &GStreamer; tag support is that tags are
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preserved in pipelines. This means that if you transcode one file
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containing tags into another media type, and that new media type
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supports tags too, then the tags will be handled as part of the
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data stream and be merged into the newly written media file, too.
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</para>
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</sect1>
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</chapter>
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