gstreamer/docs/design/part-events.txt
2013-10-31 16:28:06 -07:00

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Events
------
Events are objects passed around in parallel to the buffer dataflow to
notify elements of various events.
Events are received on pads using the event function. Some events should
be interleaved with the data stream so they require taking the STREAM_LOCK,
others don't.
Different types of events exist to implement various functionalities.
GST_EVENT_FLUSH_START: data is to be discarded
GST_EVENT_FLUSH_STOP: data is allowed again
GST_EVENT_CAPS: Format information about the following buffers
GST_EVENT_SEGMENT: Timing information for the following buffers
GST_EVENT_TAG: Stream metadata.
GST_EVENT_BUFFERSIZE: Buffer size requirements
GST_EVENT_SINK_MESSAGE: An event turned into a message by sinks
GST_EVENT_EOS: no more data is to be expected on a pad.
GST_EVENT_QOS: A notification of the quality of service of the stream
GST_EVENT_SEEK: A seek should be performed to a new position in the stream
GST_EVENT_NAVIGATION: A navigation event.
GST_EVENT_LATENCY: Configure the latency in a pipeline
GST_EVENT_STEP: Stepping event
GST_EVENT_RECONFIGURE: stream reconfigure event
* GST_EVENT_DRAIN: Play all data downstream before returning.
* not yet implemented, under investigation, might be needed to do still frames
in DVD.
src pads
--------
A gst_pad_push_event() on a srcpad will first store the sticky event in the
sticky array before sending the event to the peer pad. If there is no peer pad
and the event was not stored in the sticky array, FALSE is returned.
Flushing pads will refuse the events and will not store the sticky events.
sink pads
---------
A gst_pad_send_event() on a sinkpad will call the event function on the pad. If
the event function returns success, the sticky event is stored in the sticky
event array and the event is marked for update.
When the pad is flushing, the _send_event() function returns FALSE immediately.
When the next data item is pushed, the pending events are pushed first.
This ensures that the event function is never called for flushing pads and that
the sticky array only contains events for which the event function returned
success.
pad link
--------
When linking pads, the srcpad sticky events are marked for update when they are
different from the sinkpad events. The next buffer push will push the events to
the sinkpad.
FLUSH_START/STOP
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A flush event is sent both downstream and upstream to clear any pending data
from the pipeline. This might be needed to make the graph more responsive
when the normal dataflow gets interrupted by for example a seek event.
Flushing happens in two stages.
1) a source element sends the FLUSH_START event to the downstream peer element.
The downstream element starts rejecting buffers from the upstream elements. It
sends the flush event further downstream and discards any buffers it is
holding as well as return from the chain function as soon as possible.
This makes sure that all upstream elements get unblocked.
This event is not synchronized with the STREAM_LOCK and can be done in the
application thread.
2) a source element sends the FLUSH_STOP event to indicate
that the downstream element can accept buffers again. The downstream
element sends the flush event to its peer elements. After this step dataflow
continues. The FLUSH_STOP call is synchronized with the STREAM_LOCK so any
data used by the chain function can safely freed here if needed. Any
pending EOS events should be discarded too.
After the flush completes the second stage, data is flowing again in the pipeline
and all buffers are more recent than those before the flush.
For elements that use the pullrange function, they send both flush events to
the upstream pads in the same way to make sure that the pullrange function
unlocks and any pending buffers are cleared in the upstream elements.
A FLUSH_START may instruct the pipeline to distribute a new base_time to
elements so that the running_time is reset to 0.
(see part-clocks.txt and part-synchronisation.txt).
EOS
~~~
The EOS event can only be sent on a sinkpad. It is typically emitted by the
source element when it has finished sending data. This event is mainly sent
in the streaming thread but can also be sent from the application thread.
The downstream element should forward the EOS event to its downstream peer
elements. This way the event will eventually reach the sinks which should
then post an EOS message on the bus when in PLAYING.
An element might want to flush its internally queued data before forwarding
the EOS event downstream. This flushing can be done in the same thread as
the one handling the EOS event.
For elements with multiple sink pads it might be possible to wait for EOS on
all the pads before forwarding the event.
The EOS event should always be interleaved with the data flow, therefore the
GStreamer core will take the STREAM_LOCK.
Sometimes the EOS event is generated by another element than the source, for
example a demuxer element can generate an EOS event before the source element.
This is not a problem, the demuxer does not send an EOS event to the upstream
element but returns GST_FLOW_EOS, causing the source element to stop
sending data.
An element that sends EOS on a pad should stop sending data on that pad. Source
elements typically pause() their task for that purpose.
By default, a GstBin collects all EOS messages from all its sinks before
posting the EOS message to its parent.
The EOS is only posted on the bus by the sink elements in the PLAYING state. If
the EOS event is received in the PAUSED state, it is queued until the element
goes to PLAYING.
A FLUSH_STOP event on an element flushes the EOS state and all pending EOS messages.
SEGMENT
~~~~~~~
A segment event is sent downstream by an element to indicate that the following
group of buffers start and end at the specified positions. The newsegment event
also contains the playback speed and the applied rate of the stream.
Since the stream time is always set to 0 at start and after a seek, a 0
point for all next buffer's timestamps has to be propagated through the
pipeline using the SEGMENT event.
Before sending buffers, an element must send a SEGMENT event. An element is
free to refuse buffers if they were not preceded by a SEGMENT event.
Elements that sync to the clock should store the SEGMENT start and end values
and subtract the start value from the buffer timestamp before comparing
it against the stream time (see part-clocks.txt).
An element is allowed to send out buffers with the SEGMENT start time already
subtracted from the timestamp. If it does so, it needs to send a corrected
SEGMENT downstream, ie, one with start time 0.
A SEGMENT event should be generated as soon as possible in the pipeline and
is usually generated by a demuxer or source. The event is generated before
pushing the first buffer and after a seek, right before pushing the new buffer.
The SEGMENT event should be sent from the streaming thread and should be
serialized with the buffers.
Buffers should be clipped within the range indicated by the newsegment event
start and stop values. Sinks must drop buffers with timestamps out of the
indicated segment range.
TAG
~~~
The tag event is sent downstream when an element has discovered metadata
tags in a media file. Encoders can use this event to adjust their tagging
system. A tag is serialized with buffers.
BUFFERSIZE
~~~~~~~~~~
NOTE: This event is not yet implemented.
An element can suggest a buffersize for downstream elements. This is
typically done by elements that produce data on multiple source pads
such as demuxers.
QOS
~~~
A QOS, or quality of service message, is generated in an element to report
to the upstream elements about the current quality of real-time performance
of the stream. This is typically done by the sinks that measure the amount
of framedrops they have. (see part-qos.txt)
SEEK
~~~~
A seek event is issued by the application to configure the playback range
of a stream. It is called form the application thread and travels upstream.
The seek event contains the new start and stop position of playback
after the seek is performed. Optionally the stop position can be left
at -1 to continue playback to the end of the stream. The seek event
also contains the new playback rate of the stream, 1.0 is normal playback,
2.0 double speed and negative values mean backwards playback.
A seek usually flushes the graph to minimize latency after the seek. This
behaviour is triggered by using the SEEK_FLUSH flag on the seek event.
The seek event usually starts from the sink elements and travels upstream
from element to element until it reaches an element that can perform the
seek. No intermediate element is allowed to assume that a seek to this
location will happen. It is allowed to modify the start and stop times if it
needs to do so. this is typically the case if a seek is requested for a
non-time position.
The actual seek is performed in the application thread so that success
or failure can be reported as a return value of the seek event. It is
therefore important that before executing the seek, the element acquires
the STREAM_LOCK so that the streaming thread and the seek get serialized.
The general flow of executing the seek with FLUSH is as follows:
1) unblock the streaming threads, they could be blocked in a chain
function. This is done by sending a FLUSH_START on all srcpads or by pausing
the streaming task, depending on the seek FLUSH flag.
The flush will make sure that all downstream elements unlock and
that control will return to this element chain/loop function.
We cannot lock the STREAM_LOCK before doing this since it might
cause a deadlock.
2) acquire the STREAM_LOCK. This will work since the chain/loop function
was unlocked/paused in step 1).
3) perform the seek. since the STREAM_LOCK is held, the streaming thread
will wait for the seek to complete. Most likely, the stream thread
will pause because the peer elements are flushing.
4) send a FLUSH_STOP event to all peer elements to allow streaming again.
5) create a SEGMENT event to signal the new buffer timestamp base time.
This event must be queued to be sent by the streaming thread.
6) start stopped tasks and unlock the STREAM_LOCK, dataflow will continue
now from the new position.
More information about the different seek types can be found in
part-seeking.txt.
NAVIGATION
~~~~~~~~~~~
A navigation event is generated by a sink element to signal the elements
of a navigation event such as a mouse movement or button click.
Navigation events travel upstream.
LATENCY
~~~~~~~
A latency event is used to configure a certain latency in the pipeline. It
contains a single GstClockTime with the required latency. The latency value is
calculated by the pipeline and distributed to all sink elements before they are
set to PLAYING. The sinks will add the configured latency value to the
timestamps of the buffer in order to delay their presentation.
(See also part-latency.txt).
DRAIN
~~~~~
NOTE: This event is not yet implemented.
Drain event indicates that upstream is about to perform a real-time event, such
as pausing to present an interactive menu or such, and needs to wait for all
data it has sent to be played-out in the sink.
Drain should only be used by live elements, as it may otherwise occur during
prerolling.
Usually after draining the pipeline, an element either needs to modify timestamps,
or FLUSH to prevent subsequent data being discarded at the sinks for arriving
late (only applies during playback scenarios).