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522 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
522 lines
20 KiB
Markdown
# Basic tutorial 3: Dynamic pipelines
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## Goal
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This tutorial shows the rest of the basic concepts required to use
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GStreamer, which allow building the pipeline "on the fly", as
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information becomes available, instead of having a monolithic pipeline
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defined at the beginning of your application.
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After this tutorial, you will have the necessary knowledge to start the
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[Playback tutorials](tutorials/playback/index.md). The points reviewed
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here will be:
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- How to attain finer control when linking elements.
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- How to be notified of interesting events so you can react in time.
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- The various states in which an element can be.
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## Introduction
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As you are about to see, the pipeline in this tutorial is not
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completely built before it is set to the playing state. This is OK. If
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we did not take further action, data would reach the end of the
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pipeline and the pipeline would produce an error message and stop. But
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we are going to take further action...
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In this example we are opening a file which is multiplexed (or *muxed)*,
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this is, audio and video are stored together inside a *container* file.
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The elements responsible for opening such containers are called
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*demuxers*, and some examples of container formats are Matroska (MKV),
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Quick Time (QT, MOV), Ogg, or Advanced Systems Format (ASF, WMV, WMA).
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If a container embeds multiple streams (one video and two audio tracks,
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for example), the demuxer will separate them and expose them through
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different output ports. In this way, different branches can be created
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in the pipeline, dealing with different types of data.
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The ports through which GStreamer elements communicate with each other
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are called pads (`GstPad`). There exists sink pads, through which data
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enters an element, and source pads, through which data exits an element.
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It follows naturally that source elements only contain source pads, sink
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elements only contain sink pads, and filter elements contain
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both.
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![](images/src-element.png) ![](images/filter-element.png) ![](images/sink-element.png)
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**Figure 1**. GStreamer elements with their pads.
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A demuxer contains one sink pad, through which the muxed data arrives,
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and multiple source pads, one for each stream found in the container:
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![](images/filter-element-multi.png)
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**Figure 2**. A demuxer with two source pads.
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For completeness, here you have a simplified pipeline containing a
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demuxer and two branches, one for audio and one for video. This is
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**NOT** the pipeline that will be built in this example:
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![](images/simple-player.png)
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**Figure 3**. Example pipeline with two branches.
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The main complexity when dealing with demuxers is that they cannot
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produce any information until they have received some data and have had
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a chance to look at the container to see what is inside. This is,
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demuxers start with no source pads to which other elements can link, and
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thus the pipeline must necessarily terminate at them.
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The solution is to build the pipeline from the source down to the
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demuxer, and set it to run (play). When the demuxer has received enough
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information to know about the number and kind of streams in the
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container, it will start creating source pads. This is the right time
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for us to finish building the pipeline and attach it to the newly added
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demuxer pads.
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For simplicity, in this example, we will only link to the audio pad and
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ignore the video.
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## Dynamic Hello World
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Copy this code into a text file named `basic-tutorial-3.c` (or find it
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in the SDK installation).
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**basic-tutorial-3.c**
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``` c
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#include <gst/gst.h>
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/* Structure to contain all our information, so we can pass it to callbacks */
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typedef struct _CustomData {
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GstElement *pipeline;
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GstElement *source;
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GstElement *convert;
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GstElement *sink;
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} CustomData;
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/* Handler for the pad-added signal */
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static void pad_added_handler (GstElement *src, GstPad *pad, CustomData *data);
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int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
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CustomData data;
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GstBus *bus;
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GstMessage *msg;
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GstStateChangeReturn ret;
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gboolean terminate = FALSE;
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/* Initialize GStreamer */
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gst_init (&argc, &argv);
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/* Create the elements */
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data.source = gst_element_factory_make ("uridecodebin", "source");
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data.convert = gst_element_factory_make ("audioconvert", "convert");
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data.sink = gst_element_factory_make ("autoaudiosink", "sink");
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/* Create the empty pipeline */
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data.pipeline = gst_pipeline_new ("test-pipeline");
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if (!data.pipeline || !data.source || !data.convert || !data.sink) {
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g_printerr ("Not all elements could be created.\n");
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return -1;
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}
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/* Build the pipeline. Note that we are NOT linking the source at this
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* point. We will do it later. */
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gst_bin_add_many (GST_BIN (data.pipeline), data.source, data.convert , data.sink, NULL);
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if (!gst_element_link (data.convert, data.sink)) {
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g_printerr ("Elements could not be linked.\n");
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gst_object_unref (data.pipeline);
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return -1;
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}
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/* Set the URI to play */
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g_object_set (data.source, "uri", "https://www.freedesktop.org/software/gstreamer-sdk/data/media/sintel_trailer-480p.webm", NULL);
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/* Connect to the pad-added signal */
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g_signal_connect (data.source, "pad-added", G_CALLBACK (pad_added_handler), &data);
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/* Start playing */
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ret = gst_element_set_state (data.pipeline, GST_STATE_PLAYING);
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if (ret == GST_STATE_CHANGE_FAILURE) {
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g_printerr ("Unable to set the pipeline to the playing state.\n");
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gst_object_unref (data.pipeline);
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return -1;
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}
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/* Listen to the bus */
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bus = gst_element_get_bus (data.pipeline);
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do {
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msg = gst_bus_timed_pop_filtered (bus, GST_CLOCK_TIME_NONE,
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GST_MESSAGE_STATE_CHANGED | GST_MESSAGE_ERROR | GST_MESSAGE_EOS);
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/* Parse message */
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if (msg != NULL) {
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GError *err;
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gchar *debug_info;
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switch (GST_MESSAGE_TYPE (msg)) {
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case GST_MESSAGE_ERROR:
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gst_message_parse_error (msg, &err, &debug_info);
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g_printerr ("Error received from element %s: %s\n", GST_OBJECT_NAME (msg->src), err->message);
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g_printerr ("Debugging information: %s\n", debug_info ? debug_info : "none");
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g_clear_error (&err);
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g_free (debug_info);
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terminate = TRUE;
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break;
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case GST_MESSAGE_EOS:
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g_print ("End-Of-Stream reached.\n");
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terminate = TRUE;
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break;
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case GST_MESSAGE_STATE_CHANGED:
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/* We are only interested in state-changed messages from the pipeline */
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if (GST_MESSAGE_SRC (msg) == GST_OBJECT (data.pipeline)) {
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GstState old_state, new_state, pending_state;
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gst_message_parse_state_changed (msg, &old_state, &new_state, &pending_state);
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g_print ("Pipeline state changed from %s to %s:\n",
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gst_element_state_get_name (old_state), gst_element_state_get_name (new_state));
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}
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break;
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default:
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/* We should not reach here */
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g_printerr ("Unexpected message received.\n");
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break;
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}
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gst_message_unref (msg);
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}
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} while (!terminate);
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/* Free resources */
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gst_object_unref (bus);
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gst_element_set_state (data.pipeline, GST_STATE_NULL);
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gst_object_unref (data.pipeline);
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return 0;
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}
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/* This function will be called by the pad-added signal */
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static void pad_added_handler (GstElement *src, GstPad *new_pad, CustomData *data) {
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GstPad *sink_pad = gst_element_get_static_pad (data->convert, "sink");
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GstPadLinkReturn ret;
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GstCaps *new_pad_caps = NULL;
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GstStructure *new_pad_struct = NULL;
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const gchar *new_pad_type = NULL;
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g_print ("Received new pad '%s' from '%s':\n", GST_PAD_NAME (new_pad), GST_ELEMENT_NAME (src));
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/* If our converter is already linked, we have nothing to do here */
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if (gst_pad_is_linked (sink_pad)) {
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g_print (" We are already linked. Ignoring.\n");
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goto exit;
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}
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/* Check the new pad's type */
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new_pad_caps = gst_pad_query_caps (new_pad, NULL);
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new_pad_struct = gst_caps_get_structure (new_pad_caps, 0);
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new_pad_type = gst_structure_get_name (new_pad_struct);
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if (!g_str_has_prefix (new_pad_type, "audio/x-raw")) {
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g_print (" It has type '%s' which is not raw audio. Ignoring.\n", new_pad_type);
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goto exit;
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}
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/* Attempt the link */
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ret = gst_pad_link (new_pad, sink_pad);
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if (GST_PAD_LINK_FAILED (ret)) {
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g_print (" Type is '%s' but link failed.\n", new_pad_type);
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} else {
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g_print (" Link succeeded (type '%s').\n", new_pad_type);
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}
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exit:
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/* Unreference the new pad's caps, if we got them */
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if (new_pad_caps != NULL)
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gst_caps_unref (new_pad_caps);
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/* Unreference the sink pad */
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gst_object_unref (sink_pad);
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}
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```
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> ![Information](images/icons/emoticons/information.png)
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> Need help?
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>
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> If you need help to compile this code, refer to the **Building the tutorials** section for your platform: [Linux](installing/on-linux.md#InstallingonLinux-Build), [Mac OS X](installing/on-mac-osx.md#InstallingonMacOSX-Build) or [Windows](installing/on-windows.md#InstallingonWindows-Build), or use this specific command on Linux:
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> ``gcc basic-tutorial-3.c -o basic-tutorial-3 `pkg-config --cflags --libs gstreamer-1.0` ``
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>
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>If you need help to run this code, refer to the **Running the tutorials** section for your platform: [Linux](installing/on-linux.md#InstallingonLinux-Run), [Mac OS X](installing/on-mac-osx.md#InstallingonMacOSX-Run) or [Windows](installing/on-windows.md#InstallingonWindows-Run).
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>
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> This tutorial only plays audio. The media is fetched from the Internet, so it might take a few seconds to start, depending on your connection speed.
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>
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>Required libraries: `gstreamer-1.0`
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## Walkthrough
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``` c
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/* Structure to contain all our information, so we can pass it to callbacks */
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typedef struct _CustomData {
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GstElement *pipeline;
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GstElement *source;
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GstElement *convert;
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GstElement *sink;
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} CustomData;
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```
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So far we have kept all the information we needed (pointers
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to `GstElement`s, basically) as local variables. Since this tutorial
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(and most real applications) involves callbacks, we will group all our
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data in a structure for easier handling.
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``` c
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/* Handler for the pad-added signal */
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static void pad_added_handler (GstElement *src, GstPad *pad, CustomData *data);
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```
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This is a forward reference, to be used later.
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``` c
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/* Create the elements */
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data.source = gst_element_factory_make ("uridecodebin", "source");
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data.convert = gst_element_factory_make ("audioconvert", "convert");
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data.sink = gst_element_factory_make ("autoaudiosink", "sink");
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```
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We create the elements as usual. `uridecodebin` will internally
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instantiate all the necessary elements (sources, demuxers and decoders)
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to turn a URI into raw audio and/or video streams. It does half the work
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that `playbin` does. Since it contains demuxers, its source pads are
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not initially available and we will need to link to them on the fly.
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`audioconvert` is useful for converting between different audio formats,
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making sure that this example will work on any platform, since the
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format produced by the audio decoder might not be the same that the
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audio sink expects.
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The `autoaudiosink` is the equivalent of `autovideosink` seen in the
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previous tutorial, for audio. It will render the audio stream to the
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audio card.
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``` c
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if (!gst_element_link (data.convert, data.sink)) {
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g_printerr ("Elements could not be linked.\n");
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gst_object_unref (data.pipeline);
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return -1;
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}
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```
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Here we link the converter element to the sink, but we **DO NOT** link
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them with the source, since at this point it contains no source pads. We
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just leave this branch (converter + sink) unlinked, until later on.
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``` c
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/* Set the URI to play */
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g_object_set (data.source, "uri", "https://www.freedesktop.org/software/gstreamer-sdk/data/media/sintel_trailer-480p.webm", NULL);
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```
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We set the URI of the file to play via a property, just like we did in
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the previous tutorial.
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### Signals
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``` c
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/* Connect to the pad-added signal */
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g_signal_connect (data.source, "pad-added", G_CALLBACK (pad_added_handler), &data);
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```
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`GSignals` are a crucial point in GStreamer. They allow you to be
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notified (by means of a callback) when something interesting has
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happened. Signals are identified by a name, and each `GObject` has its
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own signals.
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In this line, we are *attaching* to the “pad-added” signal of our source
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(an `uridecodebin` element). To do so, we use `g_signal_connect()` and
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provide the callback function to be used (`pad_added_handler`) and a
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data pointer. GStreamer does nothing with this data pointer, it just
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forwards it to the callback so we can share information with it. In this
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case, we pass a pointer to the `CustomData` structure we built specially
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for this purpose.
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The signals that a `GstElement` generates can be found in its
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documentation or using the `gst-inspect-1.0` tool as described in [Basic
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tutorial 10: GStreamer
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tools](tutorials/basic/gstreamer-tools.md).
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We are now ready to go! Just set the pipeline to the PLAYING state and
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start listening to the bus for interesting messages (like ERROR or EOS),
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just like in the previous tutorials.
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### The callback
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When our source element finally has enough information to start
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producing data, it will create source pads, and trigger the “pad-added”
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signal. At this point our callback will be
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called:
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``` c
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static void pad_added_handler (GstElement *src, GstPad *new_pad, CustomData *data) {
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```
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`src` is the `GstElement` which triggered the signal. In this example,
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it can only be the `uridecodebin`, since it is the only signal to which
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we have attached. The first parameter of a signal handler is always the object
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that has triggered it.
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`new_pad` is the `GstPad` that has just been added to the `src` element.
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This is usually the pad to which we want to link.
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`data` is the pointer we provided when attaching to the signal. In this
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example, we use it to pass the `CustomData` pointer.
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``` c
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GstPad *sink_pad = gst_element_get_static_pad (data->convert, "sink");
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```
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From `CustomData` we extract the converter element, and then retrieve
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its sink pad using `gst_element_get_static_pad ()`. This is the pad to
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which we want to link `new_pad`. In the previous tutorial we linked
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element against element, and let GStreamer choose the appropriate pads.
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Now we are going to link the pads directly.
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``` c
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/* If our converter is already linked, we have nothing to do here */
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if (gst_pad_is_linked (sink_pad)) {
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g_print (" We are already linked. Ignoring.\n");
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goto exit;
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}
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```
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`uridecodebin` can create as many pads as it sees fit, and for each one,
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this callback will be called. These lines of code will prevent us from
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trying to link to a new pad once we are already linked.
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``` c
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/* Check the new pad's type */
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new_pad_caps = gst_pad_query_caps (new_pad, NULL);
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new_pad_struct = gst_caps_get_structure (new_pad_caps, 0);
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new_pad_type = gst_structure_get_name (new_pad_struct);
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if (!g_str_has_prefix (new_pad_type, "audio/x-raw")) {
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g_print (" It has type '%s' which is not raw audio. Ignoring.\n", new_pad_type);
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goto exit;
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}
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```
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Now we will check the type of data this new pad is going to output,
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because we are only interested in pads producing audio. We have
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previously created a piece of pipeline which deals with audio (an
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`audioconvert` linked with an `autoaudiosink`), and we will not be able
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to link it to a pad producing video, for example.
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`gst_pad_query_caps()` retrieves the *capabilities* of the pad (this is,
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the kind of data it supports), wrapped in a `GstCaps` structure. A pad
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can offer many capabilities, and hence `GstCaps` can contain many
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`GstStructure`, each representing a different capability.
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Since, in this case, we know that the pad we want only had one
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capability (audio), we retrieve the first `GstStructure` with
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`gst_caps_get_structure()`.
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Finally, with `gst_structure_get_name()` we recover the name of the
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structure, which contains the main description of the format (its *media
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type*, actually).
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If the name is not `audio/x-raw`, this is not a decoded
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audio pad, and we are not interested in it.
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Otherwise, attempt the link:
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``` c
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/* Attempt the link */
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ret = gst_pad_link (new_pad, sink_pad);
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if (GST_PAD_LINK_FAILED (ret)) {
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g_print (" Type is '%s' but link failed.\n", new_pad_type);
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} else {
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g_print (" Link succeeded (type '%s').\n", new_pad_type);
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}
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```
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`gst_pad_link()` tries to link two pads. As it was the case
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with `gst_element_link()`, the link must be specified from source to
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sink, and both pads must be owned by elements residing in the same bin
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(or pipeline).
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And we are done! When a pad of the right kind appears, it will be
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linked to the rest of the audio-processing pipeline and execution will
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continue until ERROR or EOS. However, we will squeeze a bit more content
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from this tutorial by also introducing the concept of State.
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### GStreamer States
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We already talked a bit about states when we said that playback does not
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start until you bring the pipeline to the PLAYING state. We will
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introduce here the rest of states and their meaning. There are 4 states
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in GStreamer:
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| State | Description |
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|-----------|--------------------|
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| `NULL` | the NULL state or initial state of an element. |
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| `READY` | the element is ready to go to PAUSED. |
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| `PAUSED` | the element is PAUSED, it is ready to accept and process data. Sink elements however only accept one buffer and then block. |
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| `PLAYING` | the element is PLAYING, the clock is running and the data is flowing. |
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You can only move between adjacent ones, this is, you can't go from NULL
|
||
to PLAYING, you have to go through the intermediate READY and PAUSED
|
||
states. If you set the pipeline to PLAYING, though, GStreamer will make
|
||
the intermediate transitions for you.
|
||
|
||
``` c
|
||
case GST_MESSAGE_STATE_CHANGED:
|
||
/* We are only interested in state-changed messages from the pipeline */
|
||
if (GST_MESSAGE_SRC (msg) == GST_OBJECT (data.pipeline)) {
|
||
GstState old_state, new_state, pending_state;
|
||
gst_message_parse_state_changed (msg, &old_state, &new_state, &pending_state);
|
||
g_print ("Pipeline state changed from %s to %s:\n",
|
||
gst_element_state_get_name (old_state), gst_element_state_get_name (new_state));
|
||
}
|
||
break;
|
||
```
|
||
|
||
We added this piece of code that listens to bus messages regarding state
|
||
changes and prints them on screen to help you understand the
|
||
transitions. Every element puts messages on the bus regarding its
|
||
current state, so we filter them out and only listen to messages coming
|
||
from the pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Most applications only need to worry about going to PLAYING to start
|
||
playback, then to PAUSE to perform a pause, and then back to NULL at
|
||
program exit to free all resources.
|
||
|
||
## Exercise
|
||
|
||
Dynamic pad linking has traditionally been a difficult topic for a lot
|
||
of programmers. Prove that you have achieved its mastery by
|
||
instantiating an `autovideosink` (probably with an `videoconvert` in
|
||
front) and link it to the demuxer when the right pad appears. Hint: You
|
||
are already printing on screen the type of the video pads.
|
||
|
||
You should now see (and hear) the same movie as in [Basic tutorial 1:
|
||
Hello world!](tutorials/basic/hello-world.md). In
|
||
that tutorial you used `playbin`, which is a handy element that
|
||
automatically takes care of all the demuxing and pad linking for you.
|
||
Most of the [Playback tutorials](tutorials/playback/index.md) are devoted
|
||
to `playbin`.
|
||
|
||
## Conclusion
|
||
|
||
In this tutorial, you learned:
|
||
|
||
- How to be notified of events using `GSignals`
|
||
- How to connect `GstPad`s directly instead of their parent elements.
|
||
- The various states of a GStreamer element.
|
||
|
||
You also combined these items to build a dynamic pipeline, which was not
|
||
defined at program start, but was created as information regarding the
|
||
media was available.
|
||
|
||
You can now continue with the basic tutorials and learn about performing
|
||
seeks and time-related queries in [Basic tutorial 4: Time
|
||
management](tutorials/basic/time-management.md) or move
|
||
to the [Playback tutorials](tutorials/playback/index.md), and gain more
|
||
insight about the `playbin` element.
|
||
|
||
Remember that attached to this page you should find the complete source
|
||
code of the tutorial and any accessory files needed to build it.
|
||
It has been a pleasure having you here, and see you soon!
|