mirror of
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/gstreamer/gstreamer.git
synced 2024-11-14 13:21:28 +00:00
792fc0a7a8
Original commit message from CVS: fix underquotedness, add freetype2.m4
146 lines
7 KiB
Text
146 lines
7 KiB
Text
THE GOAL
|
|
--------
|
|
What we are trying to achieve:
|
|
|
|
satisfy:
|
|
patching of CVS checkout using our patch files placed in our CVS
|
|
|
|
passing of
|
|
make
|
|
make distcheck
|
|
non-srcdir build (ie, mkdir build; cd build; ../configure; make)
|
|
|
|
THE SETUP
|
|
---------
|
|
There is a "mirror" root CVS module that contains "ffmpeg".
|
|
This directory contains a vendor-branch checkout of upstream FFmpeg CVS
|
|
of a given day.
|
|
|
|
On head, the following things have been commited on top of this:
|
|
* patches/, which is a directory with a set of patches, and a series file
|
|
listing the order, as generated by quilt
|
|
* .pc/, which is a tree of files that quilt uses to keep control of its state.
|
|
It contains a list of applied patches, and one directory per patch,
|
|
containing a tree of hardlinked files that were added to the patchset, and
|
|
a .pc file listing all files part of the patchset.
|
|
* the result of having all these patches commited (ie, quilt push -a) to the
|
|
ffmpeg tree.
|
|
|
|
Both the actually patched CVS ffmpeg code as well as the .pc dir need to be
|
|
commited to CVS so the state of quilt wrt. the source is in sync.
|
|
|
|
THE WARNING
|
|
-----------
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
NEVER EVER commit stuff in gst-libs/ext/ffmpeg UNLESS your quilt stack is
|
|
completely applied !
|
|
This means, ALWAYS make sure quilt push -a has been run without problems.
|
|
|
|
What's more, if you want to be on the safe side, make sure that you can
|
|
unapply and reapply without problems, by running quilt pop -a then
|
|
quilt push -a.
|
|
|
|
***
|
|
|
|
THE WAY
|
|
-------
|
|
- If you want to hack on our copy of the FFmpeg code, there are some basic
|
|
rules you need to respect:
|
|
- you need to use quilt. If you don't use quilt, you can't hack on it.
|
|
- we separate patches based on the functionality they patch, and whether
|
|
or not we want to send stuff upstream. Make sure you work in the right
|
|
patch. use "quilt applied" to check which patches are applied.
|
|
- before starting to hack, run cvs diff. There should be NO diffs, and
|
|
NO files listed with question mark. If there are, somebody before you
|
|
probably made a mistake. To manage the state correctly, it is vital that
|
|
none of the files are unknown to CVS.
|
|
- if you want to add a file to a patchset, you need to:
|
|
- be in the right patchset
|
|
- quilt add (file)
|
|
- cvs add .pc/(patchsetname)/(file)
|
|
- cvs commit .pc/(patchsetname) (to update the state of quilt in cvs)
|
|
- edit the file
|
|
- cvs add the file if it doesn't exist yet
|
|
- quilt refresh
|
|
- quilt push -a (This one is IMPORTANT, otherwise you'll have a huge diff)
|
|
- cvs commit
|
|
- if you want to add a patchset, you need to:
|
|
- go over the procedure with thomas to check it's correct
|
|
- decide where in the stack to put it. ask for help if you don't know.
|
|
- go there in the patch stack (use quilt pop/push)
|
|
- quilt new (patchsetname).patch (don't forget .patch !)
|
|
- quilt add (files)
|
|
- cvs add .pc/(patchsetname) the whole tree
|
|
- cvs commit .pc/(patchsetname)
|
|
- quilt refresh
|
|
- quilt push -a
|
|
- cvs commit
|
|
- cvs diff (to check if any of the files are unknown to CVS; if they are,
|
|
you need to add them to CVS)
|
|
|
|
THE PLUGIN
|
|
----------
|
|
Some notes on how ffmpeg wrapping inside GStreamer currently works:
|
|
* gstffmpeg{dec,enc,demux,mux}.c are wrappers for specific element types from
|
|
their ffmpeg counterpart. If you want to wrap a new type of element in
|
|
ffmpeg (e.g. the URLProtocol things), then you'd need to write a new
|
|
wrapper file.
|
|
|
|
* gstffmpegcolorspace.c is a wrapper for one specific function in ffmpeg:
|
|
colorspace conversion. This works different from the previously mentioned
|
|
ones, and we'll come to that in the next item. If you want to wrap one
|
|
specific function, then that, too, belongs in a new wrapper file.
|
|
|
|
* the important difference between all those is that the colorspace element
|
|
contains one element, so there is a 1<->1 mapping. This makes for a fairly
|
|
basic element implementation. gstffmpegcolorspace.c, therefore, doesn't
|
|
differ much from other colorspace elements. The ffmpeg element types,
|
|
however, define a whole *list* of elements (in GStreamer, each decoder etc.
|
|
needs to be its own element). We use a set of tricks for that to keep
|
|
coding simple: codec mapping and dynamic type creation.
|
|
|
|
* ffmpeg uses CODEC_ID_* enumerations for their codecs. GStreamer uses caps,
|
|
which consists of a mimetype and a defined set of properties. In ffmpeg,
|
|
these properties live in a AVCodecContext struct, which contains anything
|
|
that could configure any codec (which makes it rather messy, but ohwell).
|
|
To convert from one to the other, we use codec mapping, which is done in
|
|
gstffmpegcodecmap.[ch]. This is the most important file in the whole
|
|
ffmpeg wrapping process! It contains functions to go from a codec type
|
|
(video or audio - used as the output format for decoding or the input
|
|
format for encoding), a codec id (to identify each format) or a format id
|
|
(a string identifying a file format - usually the file format extension)
|
|
to a GstCaps, and the other way around.
|
|
|
|
* to define multiple elements in one source file (which all behave similarly),
|
|
we dynamically create types for each plugin and let all of them operate on
|
|
the same struct (GstFFMpegDec, GstFFMpegEnc, ...). The functions in
|
|
gstffmpeg{dec,enc,demux,mux}.c called gst_ffmpeg*_register() do this.
|
|
The magic is as follows: for each codec or format, ffmpeg has a single
|
|
AVCodec or AV{Input,Output}Format, which are packed together in a list of
|
|
supported codecs/formats. We simply walk through the list, for each of
|
|
those, we check whether gstffmpegcodecmap.c knows about this single one.
|
|
If it does, we get the GstCaps for each pad template that belongs to it,
|
|
and register a type for all of those together. We also leave this inside
|
|
a caching struct, that will later be used by the base_init() function to
|
|
fill in information about this specific codec in the class struct of this
|
|
element (pad templates and codec/format information). Since the actual
|
|
codec information is the only thing that really makes each codec/format
|
|
different (they all behave the same through the ffmpeg API), we don't
|
|
really need to do anything else that is codec-specific, so all other
|
|
functions are rather simple.
|
|
|
|
* one particular thing that needs mention is how gstffmpeg{mux,demux}.c and
|
|
gstffmpegprotocol.c interoperate. ffmpeg uses URLProtocols for data input
|
|
and output. Now, of course, we want to use the *GStreamer* way of doing
|
|
input and output (filesrc, ...) rather than the ffmpeg way. Therefore, we
|
|
wrap up a GstPad as a URLProtocol and register this with ffmpeg. This is
|
|
what gstffmpegprotocol.c does. The URL is called gstreamer://%p, where %p
|
|
is the address of a GstPad. gstffmpeg{mux,demux}.c then open a file called
|
|
gstreamer://%p, with %p being their source/sink pad, respectively. This
|
|
way, we use GStreamer for data input/output through the ffmpeg API. It's
|
|
rather ugly, but it has worked quite well so far.
|
|
|
|
* there's lots of things that still need doing. See the TODO file for more
|
|
information.
|