gstreamer/docs/design/part-negotiation.txt

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Negotiation
-----------
Capabilities negotiation is the process of deciding on an adequate
format for dataflow within a GStreamer pipeline. Ideally, negotiation
(also known as "capsnego") transfers information from those parts of the
pipeline that have information to those parts of the pipeline that are
flexible, constrained by those parts of the pipeline that are not
flexible.
GStreamer's two scheduling modes, push mode and pull mode, lend
themselves to different mechanisms to achieve this goal. As it is more
common we describe push mode negotiation first.
Push-mode negotiation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Push-mode negotiation happens when elements want to push buffers and
need to decide on the format. This is called downstream negotiation
because the upstream element decides the format for the downstream
element. This is the most common case.
Negotiation can also happen when a downstream element wants to receive
another data format from an upstream element. This is called upstream
negotiation.
The basics of negotiation are as follows:
- GstCaps (see part-caps.txt) are refcounted before they are pushed as
an event to describe the contents of the following buffer.
- An element should reconfigure itself to the new format received as a CAPS
event before processing the following buffers. If the data type in the
caps event is not acceptable, the element should refuse the buffer by
returning an appropriate GST_FLOW_NOT_NEGOTIATED return value from the
chain function.
- Downstream elements can request a format change of the stream by sending a
RECONFIGURE event upstream. Upstream elements will renegotiate a new format
when they receive a RECONFIGURE event.
The general flow for a source pad starting the negotiation.
src sink
| |
| accepts? |
type A |---------------->|
| yes |
|< - - - - - - - -|
| |
| send_event() |
send CAPS |---------------->| Receive type A, reconfigure to
event A | | process type A.
| |
| push |
push buffer |---------------->| Process buffer of type A
| |
One possible implementation in pseudo code:
[element wants to create a buffer]
if not format
# see what we can do
ourcaps = gst_pad_get_caps (srcpad)
# see what the peer can do filtered against our caps
candidates = gst_pad_peer_get_caps (srcpad, ourcaps)
foreach candidate in candidates
# make sure the caps is fixed
fixedcaps = gst_pad_fixate_caps (srcpad, candidate)
# see if the peer accepts it
if gst_pad_peer_accept_caps (srcpad, fixedcaps)
# store the caps as the negotiated caps, this will
# call the setcaps function on the pad
gst_pad_push_event (srcpad, gst_event_new_caps (fixedcaps))
break
endif
done
endif
#negotiate allocator/bufferpool with the ALLOCATION query
buffer = gst_buffer_new_allocate (NULL, size, 0);
# fill buffer and push
The general flow for a sink pad starting a renegotiation.
src sink
| |
| accepts? |
|<----------------| type B
| yes |
|- - - - - - - - >|-.
| | | suggest B caps next
| |<'
| |
| push_event() |
mark .-|<----------------| send RECONFIGURE event
renegotiate| | |
'>| |
| get_caps() |
renegotiate |---------------->|
| suggest B |
|< - - - - - - - -|
| |
| send_event() |
send CAPS |---------------->| Receive type B, reconfigure to
event B | | process type B.
| |
| push |
push buffer |---------------->| Process buffer of type B
| |
Use case:
videotestsrc ! xvimagesink
1) Who decides what format to use?
- src pad always decides, by convention. sinkpad can suggest a format
by putting it high in the getcaps function GstCaps.
- since the src decides, it can always choose something that it can do,
so this step can only fail if the sinkpad stated it could accept
something while later on it couldn't.
2) When does negotiation happen?
- before srcpad does a push, it figures out a type as stated in 1), then
it pushes a caps event with the type. The sink checks the media type and
configures itself for this type.
- the source then usually does an ALLOCATION query to negotiate a bufferpool
with the sink. It then allocates a buffer from the pool and pushes it to
the sink. since the sink accepted the caps, it can create a pool for the
format.
- since the sink stated in 1) it could accept the type, it will be able to
handle it.
3) How can sink request another format?
- sink asks if new format is possible for the source.
- sink pushes RECONFIGURE event upstream
- src receives the RECONFIGURE event and marks renegotiation
- On the next buffer push, the source renegotiates the caps and the
bufferpool. The sink will put the new new prefered format high in the list
of caps it returns from its getcaps function.
videotestsrc ! queue ! xvimagesink
- queue proxies all accept and getcaps to the other peer pad.
- queue proxies the bufferpool
- queue proxies the RECONFIGURE event
- queue stores CAPS event in the queue. This means that the queue can contain
buffers with different types.
Pull-mode negotiation
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rationale
^^^^^^^^^
A pipeline in pull mode has different negotiation needs than one
activated in push mode. Push mode is optimized for two use cases:
* Playback of media files, in which the demuxers and the decoders are
the points from which format information should disseminate to the
rest of the pipeline; and
* Recording from live sources, in which users are accustomed to putting
a capsfilter directly after the source element; thus the caps
information flow proceeds from the user, through the potential caps
of the source, to the sinks of the pipeline.
In contrast, pull mode has other typical use cases:
* Playback from a lossy source, such as RTP, in which more knowledge
about the latency of the pipeline can increase quality; or
* Audio synthesis, in which audio APIs are tuned to producing only the
necessary number of samples, typically driven by a hardware interrupt
to fill a DMA buffer or a Jack[0] port buffer.
* Low-latency effects processing, whereby filters should be applied as
data is transferred from a ring buffer to a sink instead of
beforehand. For example, instead of using the internal alsasink
ringbuffer thread in push-mode wavsrc ! volume ! alsasink, placing
the volume inside the sound card writer thread via wavsrc !
audioringbuffer ! volume ! alsasink.
[0] http://jackit.sf.net
The problem with pull mode is that the sink has to know the format in
order to know how many bytes to pull via gst_pad_pull_range(). This
means that before pulling, the sink must initiate negotation to decide
on a format.
Recalling the principles of capsnego, whereby information must flow from
those that have it to those that do not, we see that the two named use
cases have different negotiation requirements:
* RTP and low-latency playback are both like the normal playback case,
in which information flows downstream.
* In audio synthesis, the part of the pipeline that has the most
information is the sink, constrained by the capabilities of the graph
that feeds it. However the caps are not completely specified; at some
point the user has to intervene to choose the sample rate, at least.
This can be done externally to gstreamer, as in the jack elements, or
internally via a capsfilter, as is customary with live sources.
Given that sinks potentially need the input of sources, as in the RTP
case and at least as a filter in the synthesis case, there must be a
negotiation phase before the pull thread is activated. Also, given the
low latency offered by pull mode, we want to avoid capsnego from within
the pulling thread, in case it causes us to miss our scheduling
deadlines.
The pull thread is usually started in the PAUSED->PLAYING state change. We must
be able to complete the negotiation before this state change happens.
The time to do capsnego, then, is after the SCHEDULING query has succeeded,
but before the sink has spawned the pulling thread.
Mechanism
^^^^^^^^^
The sink determines that the upstream elements support pull based scheduling by
doing a SCHEDULING query.
The sink initiates the negotiation process by intersecting the results
of gst_pad_get_caps() on its sink pad and its peer src pad. This is the
operation performed by gst_pad_get_allowed_caps(). In the simple
passthrough case, the peer pad's getcaps() function should return the
intersection of calling get_allowed_caps() on all of its sink pads. In
this way the sink element knows the capabilities of the entire pipeline.
The sink element then fixates the resulting caps, if necessary,
resulting in the flow caps. From now on, the getcaps function
of the sinkpad will only return these fixed caps meaning that upstream elements
will only be able to produce this format.
If the sink element could not set caps on its sink pad, it should post
an error message on the bus indicating that negotiation was not
possible.
When negotiation succeeded, the sinkpad and all upstream internally linked pads
are activated in pull mode. Typically, this operation will trigger negotiation
on the downstream elements, which will now be forced to negotiation to the
final fixed desired caps of the sinkpad.
After these steps, the sink element returns ASYNC from the state change
function. The state will commit to PAUSED when the first buffer is received in
the sink. This is needed to provide a consistent API to the applications that
expect ASYNC return values from sinks but it also allows us to perform the
remainder of the negotiation outside of the context of the pulling thread.